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El. knyga: World Heritage, Tourism and Identity: Inscription and Co-production

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The remarkable success of the 1972 UNESCO Convention Concerning the Protection of World Cultural and Natural Heritage is borne out by the fact that nearly 1,000 properties have now been designated as possessing Outstanding Universal Value and recognition given to the imperative for their protection. However, the remarkable success of the Convention is not without its challenges and a key issue for many Sites relates to the touristic legacies of inscription. For many sites inscription on the World Heritage List acts as a promotional device and the management challenge is one of protection, conservation and dealing with increased numbers of tourists. For other sites, designation has not brought anticipated expansion in tourist numbers and associated investments. What is clear is that tourism is now a central concern to the wide array of stakeholders involved with World Heritage Sites.

Recenzijos

'This volume provides an exploration of current themes in World Heritage Site tourism using case studies from nearly every portion of Earth. Contained within are excellent discussions of topics not covered elsewhere: the social life of heritage tourism sites, the absence of gender in heritage, and the role of intangibility. It is a useful addition to any heritage tourism library.' Daniel C. Knudsen, Indiana University, USA This collection of essays provides a well-rounded, global overview of many important issues in the context of sustainable World Heritage Site management. Its contributors deliver a wide-ranging array of empirical case studies and tasty conceptual tidbits we all need to appreciate better as we strive to understand tourism, heritagization processes and the consumption of tangible and intangible pasts. Dallen J. Timothy, Arizona State University, USA

List of Figures
vii
List of Tables
ix
List of Contributors
xi
1 World Heritage and Tourism: From Opposition to Co-production
1(24)
Maria Gravari-Barbas
Laurent Bourdeau
Mike Robinson
2 The Use and Impact of World Heritage Designation by Canadian Heritage Sites---An Exploratory Media Analysis
25(12)
Elizabeth A. Halpenny
Alexandra Arellano
3 The Impact of World Heritage on Tourism and the Integrity of Heritage: Some Experience from Mexico
37(14)
Richard Shieldhouse
4 Implications of World Heritage Designation for Local Residents: A Case Study from Taishan and Taiqian, China
51(18)
Yixiao Xiang
Geoffrey Wall
5 Cultural Routes as World Heritage Sites: Challenges of the Nomination of the Ancient Silk Roads
69(12)
Isabel Maria Torres Martinez
6 The Relationship between World Heritage Designation and Local Identity
81(12)
Takamitsu Jimura
7 Local Consequences of Global Recognition: The "Value" of World Heritage Status for Zanzibar Stone Town
93(14)
Akbar Keshodkar
8 Gender and (World) Heritage: The Myth of a Gender Neutral Heritage
107(14)
Sarah Ellen Shortliffe
9 The Local-to-Global Dynamics of World Heritage Interpretation
121(10)
Noel B. Salazar
10 Immediacy, Photography and Memory: The Tourist Experience of Machu Picchu
131(16)
Sarah Quinlan Cutler
Sean Doherty
Barbara Carmichael
11 The Social Life of the Castles: Inclusion, Exclusion, and Heritage Sites in Ghana
147(10)
Ann Reed
12 Place Making and Experience in World Heritage Cities
157(16)
Luna Khirfan
13 Le Morne Cultural Landscape Heritage Site: Its Different Senses of Attachment and Contestation
173(14)
Chaya Hurnath
Priscilla Sambadoo
14 Expectations and Experiences of Visitors at the Giant's Causeway World Heritage Site, Northern Ireland
187(12)
Kevin R. Crawford
15 Demolition of Tangible Properties as an Intangible Practice
199(18)
Ayako Fukushima
16 The Ethics of Landscape: Discourses of Cultural and Environmental Sustainability in the Heart of Neolithic Orkney World Heritage Site
217(10)
Angela McClanahan
17 Old Maps, New Traffics: Political Itineraries around Scattered Heritage of Portuguese Origin
227(10)
Maria Cardeira da Silva
18 World Heritage and Sustainable Tourism: Shared Values?
237(20)
Jane Brantom
Index 257
Laurent Bourdeau is in the Department of Geography at the Université Laval, Canada, Maria Gravari-Barbas is at the Institut de Recherche et dĆtudes Supérieures du Tourisme, University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne, France and Mike Robinson is at the Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage, University of Birmingham, UK.