ABSTRACT

Most Americans agree that our heritage—both natural and cultural—should be protected. Then why does development run rampant, aided—rather than limited—by government inaction? Tom King has been a participant in and observer of this system for decades, as a government worker, heritage consultant, and advocate for local communities. In this hard-hitting critique of the heritage-industrial complex, King points the finger at watchdogs who instead serve as advocates, unintelligible (often contradictory) regulations, disinterested government employees and power-seeking agencies, all of whom conspire to keep our heritage unprotected. His solution to this crisis will be uncomfortable to many in power, but may help save more of our cultural and natural treasures.

chapter One|23 pages

Our Unprotected Heritage

chapter Two|13 pages

The Analyst as Proponent

chapter Three|25 pages

Reviewers as Advocates

chapter Five|17 pages

Absent Overseers, Petty Dictators

chapter Six|18 pages

All the Locked-Out People

chapter Seven|14 pages

Real Men don't Reconsider

chapter Eight|27 pages

Doing Something about It