ABSTRACT

Heritage Sites in Contemporary China: Cultural Policies and Management Practices focuses on cultural heritage policies in China emerging in the period of the 11th and 12th Five Year Plans. Various important Chinese sites across China are investigated, including Luoyang Sui, Daming Gong, Niuheliang, Xinjiang, and Nanyuewang through the dual perspective of archaeological debate and as a case study of policy making. It explores the relationship between policy and the institutional and administrative conditions, such as budgeting and land concerns, which affect it. Building on the research project implemented by the China Academy for Cultural Heritage (CACH) from 2012–2014, which focused on the impact of the Dayizhi Policy for Great Archaeological Sites, the book provides an interdisciplinary insider’s approach to viewing archaeological discoveries; policies and emerging practices in site and archaeological management; and public administration in China. Featuring contributions from experts within CACH and from the Chinese community of archaeologists, and including numerous tables, data and maps, it will appeal to researchers and scholars in disciplines such as archaeology, heritage management, public administration, and policy making.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

part I|69 pages

Context and policy

chapter 3|20 pages

Setting the dayizhi policy

chapter 4|11 pages

A three-level discussion on the dayizhi policy

Toward unanticipated consequences?

chapter 5|8 pages

Desk and field work

The research methodology

part II|176 pages

Researching actual impacts

chapter 6|33 pages

Luoyang and the Sui and Tang Capital City

Complex heritage inside a crucial district

chapter 7|36 pages

Xi’an and Daming Palace

chapter 8|26 pages

Niuheliang

From dayizhi to parkization in a rural area

chapter 9|22 pages

Xinjiang

The tensions between heritage, landscape conservation, and social impacts in a harsh climate

chapter 10|19 pages

Nanyuewang Palace site

chapter 11|19 pages

Yanxiadu Capital site

part III|45 pages

Dayizhi from policy to practices

chapter 13|20 pages

Assessing the dayizhi policy

The aggregate view

chapter 14|20 pages

Dayizhi policy

Addressing some unanticipated driving forces