ABSTRACT

Since the 1990s, heritage studies has emerged as a distinct academic field, and practices and rhetoric drawn from mainstream corporate management and strategic planning have become widespread. Based on extensive research, this book is an in-depth investigation of management practices rather than policies, based on a variety of case studies from around the world.

The authors take the issue of management in heritage seriously, but also take into account the role of other disciplines within heritage organizations. In particular, they focus on sustainability in terms of financial resources, human resources, knowledge management, and the relationship with the audience and communities of scholars. The book opens with a methodological introduction that discusses what it means to do research on management, and why international comparative research is essential. The body of the text engages issues of heritage and management through five distinct analytical lenses: management and the process of change, institutional settings and business models, change and planning, the Heritage Chain, and the space between policy and practice. Each of these five sections includes a chapter introducing the analytical framework and possible implications, followed by case histories from China, Italy, Malta, Turkey, and Peru. The book ends with a chapter of concluding reflections.

part 1|52 pages

Managerialization and Change

part 2|32 pages

Institutional Settings and Business Models

part 3|48 pages

Change and Business Plans

chapter 9|8 pages

Planning

An Effective Instrument for Change?

chapter 10|18 pages

Master Plans at Machu Picchu

Continuity and Change

chapter 11|20 pages

Byzantine Planning in Istanbul

part 4|34 pages

The Heritage Chain

chapter 12|7 pages

The Heritage Chain

Assessing the Economic Organization of the Sector

chapter 13|10 pages

The Micro Level

Reconstructing the Luoyang's Horse and Chariot Discovery

chapter 14|16 pages

The Macro Level

Cultural Heritage in Turkey

part 5|38 pages

Between Policies and Practices

chapter 15|9 pages

Between Policies and Practices

Administration Matters

chapter 16|11 pages

Best and Worst Practices in Cultural Policy

Bologna 2000, Ten Years After

chapter 17|8 pages

Indirect Policies

Public Funding for Performing Arts in Italy