1st Edition
Heritage and Community Engagement Collaboration or Contestation?
1. Introduction: Heritage and Community Engagement Steve Watson (York St John University, United Kingdom) and Emma Waterton (Keele University, United Kingdom)
2. The recognition and misrecognition of community heritage Emma Waterton (Keele University, United Kingdom) and Laurajane Smith (University of York, United Kingdom)
3. The politics of community heritage: Motivations, authority and control Elizabeth Crooke (University of Ulster, Northern Ireland)
4. Unfulfilled promises? Heritage management and community participation at some of Africa’s cultural heritage sites Shadreck Chirikure (University of Cape Town, South Africa), Munyaradzi Manyanga (University of Pretoria, South Africa), Webber Ndoro (African World Heritage Fund, South Africa) and Gilbert Pwiti (University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe)
5. Heritage and empowerment: Community-based Indigenous cultural heritage in Northern Australia Shelly Greer (James Cook University, Australia)
6. New frameworks for community engagement in archive sector: From handing over to handing on Mary Stevens (University College London, United Kingdom), Andrew Flinn (University College London, United Kingdom) and Elisabeth Shepherd (University College London, United Kingdom)
7. Uninherited heritage: Tradition and heritage production in Shetland, Åland and Svalbard Adam Grydehøj (University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom)
8. Decentring the new protectors: Transforming Aboriginal heritage in South Australia Steve Hemming (Flinders University, Australia) and Daryle Rigney (Flinders University, Australia)
9. Beyond the rhetoric: Negotiating the politics and realising the potential of community-driven heritage engagement Corinne Perkin (Macquarie University, Australia)
10. Meaning-making and cultural heritage in Jordon: The local community, the contexts and the archaeological sites in Khreibt al-Suq Shatha Abu-Khafajah (University of Jordan, Jordan)
11. Power relations and community involvement in landscape-based cultural heritage management practice: An Australian case study Jonathan Prangnell (University of Queensland, Australia), Anne Ross (University of Queensland, Australia,), Brian Coghill, (Reconciliation Australia)
Biography
Emma Waterton is Senior Lecturer in Heritage and Tourism. She holds an RCUK Fellowship in History and Heritage at Keele University. Her interests include unpacking the discursive constructions of ‘heritage’; community involvement in the management of heritage; the divisions implied between tangible and intangible heritage; and the role played by visual media. Publications include the co-authored volume (with Laurajane Smith) Heritage, Communities and Archaeology (Duckworth 2009) and the co-edited volume (with Steve Watson) Culture, Heritage and Representations (Ashgate 2010).
Steve Watson is a Principal Lecturer at York St John University, where he teaches tourism and heritage-related subjects. His interests are in the areas of cultural and heritage tourism and the social, cultural and representational processes by which places are transformed into tourist destinations. He is also concerned with the relationships between heritage and host communities and the nature of the interface between professional practice and community involvement in the formulation and construction of heritage. He has co-edited (with Emma Waterton) Culture, Heritage and Representations (Ashgate 2010).






