ABSTRACT

The World Heritage community is currently adopting policies to mainstream human rights as part of a wider sustainability agenda. This interdisciplinary book combines a state of the art review of World Heritage policy and practice at the global level with ethnographic case studies from the Asia-Pacific region by leading scholars in the field. By joining legal reviews, anthropology and practitioner experience through in-depth case studies, it shows the diversity of human rights issues in both natural and cultural heritage sites.

From site-designation to their conservation and management, the book explores the various rights issues and analyses the diverse social, cultural and legal challenges and responses at both regional and global level. Detailed case studies are included from Australia, Cambodia, China, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines and Vietnam. The book will appeal to both natural and cultural heritage professionals and human rights and heritage scholars, and will serve as a useful compendium for courses use allowing students to compare, contrast and contextualize different contexts.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

World Heritage and human rights in the Asia–Pacific and global arena

part |164 pages

Case studies

chapter |20 pages

World Heritage Committee and human rights

Learning from event ethnography

chapter |21 pages

World Heritage and human rights in Australia

From K’gari/Fraser Island to national processes 1

chapter |17 pages

Sambor Prei Kuk

Demarcating the relationship between religion and cultural heritage as human rights in Cambodia

chapter |16 pages

Empowerment and human rights

Comparing two cultural heritage cases in Xi’an, China

chapter |17 pages

World Heritage and rights in Malaysia

A case study of Kinabalu Park World Heritage Site, Sabah

chapter |18 pages

Local rights in World Heritage Sites

Learning from post-earthquake rehabilitation dynamics in the Kathmandu Valley

chapter |19 pages

Vigan

World Heritage as a ‘tool for development’? 1

chapter |19 pages

World Heritage and ethnic minority rights in Phong Nha Ke Bang, Vietnam

Cosmopolitan assemblages in neoliberal times

part |5 pages

Annex