1st Edition

The Future of Heritage as Climates Change Loss, Adaptation and Creativity

Edited By David Harvey, Jim Perry Copyright 2015
306 Pages
by Routledge

306 Pages
by Routledge

306 Pages
by Routledge

Climate change is a critical issue for heritage studies. Sites, objects and ways of life all are coming under threat, requiring alternative management, or requiring specific climate change adaptation. Heritage is key to interpreting the societal significance of climate change; notions (and images) of the past are crucial to our understanding of the present, and are used to prompt actions that... Read more
 

Introduction - Heritage and climate change: the future is not the past,
David C Harvey & Jim Perry

Part 1: Blurring the Boundaries of Heritage and Climate Change: Creative Ontologies and Consequences

Narratives of change on the Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site
Rose Ferraby

Heritage and climate change: a fatal affair
Werner Krauß

Climate and Cultural Heritage: an Experiment with the ‘Weather Memory Bank',
Georgina Endfield and Simon Naylor

Diverse Epistemic Traditions in Transformative Climate Change Research and Adaptation: Heritage and Legacy
Andrea Déri and Janardhanan Sundaresan

"We now have a name for some of the big changes happening on our Bubu [country]". The role of Indigenous knowledge for the management of cultural landscapes in a changing climate. A case study of the Kuku Nyungkal people from the Queensland Wet Tropics, Australia
Leanne Cullen-Unsworth and Kirsten Maclean

Climate change and the changing nature of conservation
Stephanie Lavau

Historical chestnut cultures, climate and rural landscapes in the Apennines
Roberta Cevasco, Diego Moreno, Ross Balzaretti and Charles Watkins

Part 2: Creative Responses to Heritage and Climate Change Relations: Processes, Policies and Possibilities

Heritage and climate change: organizational conflicts and conundrums
Diane Barthel-Bouchier

Heritage Development and Community Resilience: Insights for the Era of Climate Change
Daniel N. Laven

Strategies for Coping with the Wicked Problem of Climate Change: A Natural Heritage Perspective
Paul A. Gray, Christopher J. Lemieux, Thomas J. Beechey, J. Gordon Nelson, and Daniel J. Scott

Buffer mechanisms for managing diversity and World Heritage in the Cape Floral Region (South Africa) G. Palmer, K. Maree and J. Gouza

‘From dust to dust’: earth buildings, process and change
Louise Cooke

Relationships between climate change and built heritage: the case of dense urban cities in Hong Kong and China
Esther, H.K. Yung and Edwin, H.W. Chan

Taking the middle path to the coast: how community collaboration can help save threatened sites
Tom Dawson

Conclusion - Valuing the ever-changing past
Jim Perry & David C Harvey

Biography

David Harvey is Professor of Historical and Cultural Geography at the University of Exeter, UK. He has worked within the field of heritage studies for a number of years and his research has contributed to some key heritage debates.

Jim Perry is HT Morse Distinguished University Professor at the University of Minnesota, USA. His current research focuses on climate change adaptation in UNESCO World Heritage sites, and on capacity development supporting an ecosystem management approach to water resources.