1st Edition

Securing Urban Heritage Agents, Access, and Securitization

Edited By Heike Oevermann, Eszter Gantner Copyright 2019
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages 25 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Securing Urban Heritage considers the impact of securitization on access to urban heritage sites. Demonstrating that symbolic spaces such as these have increasingly become the location of choice for the practice and performance of contemporary politics in the last decade, the book shows how this has led to the securitization of urban public space. Highlighting specific changes that have been made, such as the installation of closed-circuit television or the limitation of access to certain streets, plazas and buildings, the book analyses the impact of different approaches to securitization.



    Claiming that access to heritage sites is a precursor to an informed and thorough understanding of heritage, the editors and contributors to this volume argue that new forms of securing urban heritage, including community involvement and digitalization, offer possibilities for the protection and use of urban heritage. Looking more closely at the versatile relationship between access and securitization in this context, the book provides a theoretical framework for the relationship between urban heritage and securitization. Comparing case studies from cities in Angola, Bulgaria, Eritrea, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Mexico, Norway, Russia, Suriname, Sweden, Turkey, UK, and the US, the book reveals some of the key mechanisms that are used to regulate access to heritage sites around the world.



    Providing much-needed insight into the diverse challenges of securitization for access and urban heritage, Securing Urban Heritage should be essential reading for academics, students, and practitioners from the fields of heritage and urban studies, architecture, art history, conservation, urban planning, and urban geography.

    Introduction Part I: Agents and Forms of Agency  1. Community Involvement in Times of Social Insecurity  2. Participatory Matters: Access, Migration, and Heritage in Berlin Museums  3. Agents, Access, and Cultural Policies of Sharing in Kyoto City and Osaka  4. Urban Heritage, Communities, and Environmental Sustainability  Part II: Technology, Heritage, and Access  5. Securitization through Digitalization and Visualization  6. Documenting Modernity  7. Urban Nuclear Reactors and the Security Theatre: The Making of Atomic Heritage in Chicago, Moscow and Stockholm  Part III: Securing Urban Heritage in Time and Space  8. Fences and Defences: Matters of Security in the City Park, Budapest 9. Rewriting History: Interpreting Heritage in Saint Petersburg and Istanbul  10. Disregarding Youth Proposals: Intangible Heritage, Securitization and Soccer Fan Groups in México  11. (Re)activated Heritage: Negotiating Socialist History in the Urban Space of Luanda  Conclusion

    Biography



    Heike Oevermann is a postdoctoral researcher and lecturer in interdisciplinary urban and heritage studies at the Georg Simmel Center for Metropolitan Studies, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin in Germany.





    Eszter Gantner is a postdoctoral researcher with a focus on urban history and heritage studies at the Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe in Marburg, Germany.