ABSTRACT

This book explores how China’s Belt and Road Initiative through promoting a non-Western-centred geopolitical narrative is affecting the conservation and management of Belt and Road heritage sites. Considering the dynamics between academics, heritage professionals, and government officials, the inscription process and management of Silk Roads heritage sites, and the practice of China’s Belt and Road heritage diplomacy, the book examines how changing heritage conservation practices are influenced by politics and professionalism and negotiated in different ways across different nation states in the Belt and Road zones. Highlighting the different aims and outlooks of Chinese diplomacy, UNESCO and other international heritage conservation organisations, nation states as guardians of national interests, and local communities as custodians of everyday lived heritage, it shows how the Belt and Road Initiative has energised multilateral efforts in heritage diplomacy and management. It also discusses how the ‘professional’ status of heritage professionals, including practitioners engaged by governments and international organisations and also scholars and researchers who provide consultancy advice, is often not politics-free, with heritage professionals often co-opted into speaking for stakeholders, especially national governments.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Heritage Conservation and China's Belt and Road Initiative: Between Politics and Professionalism

part I|46 pages

The ‘New Discourses’ of Silk Roads

chapter 4|14 pages

The Silk Roads

A Mirror of Contestation and a Metaphor of ‘Revival’ in Regional Shared Heritage

part II|59 pages

Negotiating the Inscription and Management of Heritage Sites

chapter 5|15 pages

Archaeological Heritage Management along the Silk Roads

Ancient and Modern Contexts

chapter 6|16 pages

Reviving the Ancient Maritime Silk Road

The Politics of Heritage Instrumentalisation in Asia's Port Cities of Quanzhou and Melaka

chapter 7|12 pages

Negotiating Architectural Restoration Approaches

Differences between Chinese and Singaporean Conservation Specialists

chapter 8|14 pages

The Importance of Iran's Yazd Province for the Silk Road

Past, Present and Future

part III|72 pages

China's Heritage Diplomacy along Belt and Road Initiative

chapter 9|22 pages

Chinese Archaeology in Egypt

Between Eurocentrism, De-Westernisation and Decolonisation

chapter 10|17 pages

Silk Roads Heritage Diplomacy

UNESCO & China's Belt and Road Initiative

chapter 11|16 pages

The Maritime Silk Road

Tourism, Heritage, Symbols and the People-To-People Dimension of China's ‘Heritage Diplomacy' in Indonesia

chapter 12|15 pages

Heritage Diplomacy along the Maritime Silk Roads

The Case of Muslim Sites in Southern China