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Wide-ranging essays on intangible cultural heritage, with a focus on its negotiation, its value, and how to protect it.
Essays exploring the relationship between museums and biographies, with worldwide examples and from the early nineteenth century to the present day.
Timely essays from experienced contributors examine the damage recent conflict has caused to cultural heritage, and how it may best be safeguarded in future.
An examination of the engagement of the general public with archaeology worldwide.
Considerations of the effect of trauma on heritage sites.
A journey through texts on, about, or reflecting our experience of the natural world.
Essays dealing with the question of how "sense of place" is constructed, in a variety of locations and media.
First comprehensive study of Italy's "art police", an organisation devoted to protecting cultural artefacts.
The role of the Hague Convention in today's world revisited.
Essays on aspects of the natural world, its heritage, and how best to preserve it.Europe's engagement from the late sixteenth century onwards in scientific Earth science inquiry has generated numerous and varied collections of minerals, rocks, and fossils, together with their associated archives, artworks and publications, forming a rich cultural geoheritage held in major private and especially royal and aristocratic collections, museums, universities, archives and libraries. The mines, quarries, geological structures, landforms, minerals, rocks and fossils - or geodiversity - that underpin these collections populate past and present-day Earth science literature. However, for too long their scientific, historic and cultural significance was not universally recognised and generally they were not accorded adequate resources and protection - or geoconservation. Hence, geotourism was developed in the 1990s to raise public awareness of Europe's geoheritage and geodiversity and to promote itsgeoconservation; the volume's theoretical essays and case studies examine these four core geoelements and provide a timely introduction for anyone interested in natural history museums, countryside management, and landscape-basedtourism. Dr Thomas A. Hose is an Honorary Research Associate in the School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol. He has pioneered the recognition of and research into geotourism, and is the author of the world's first doctoral thesis on the subject. Contributors: Kevin Crawford, Peter Davis, John E. Gordon. Thomas A. Hose, Jonathan G. Larwood, Slobodan B. Markovic, Martin Munt, Emmanuel Reynard, Nemanja Tomic, Djordjije A. Vasiljevic, Margaret Wood, Volker Wrede
New insights into the changing human attitudes towards wild nature through the depiction of wolves in human culture and heritage.
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