Heritage Management, Tourism, and Governance in China [electronic resource] : Managing the Past to Serve the Present / by Robert J. Shepherd, Larry Yu.

By: Shepherd, Robert J [author.]Contributor(s): Yu, Larry [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: SpringerBriefs in Archaeology ; 2Publisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2013Description: XII, 90 p. 21 illus. in color. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781461459187Subject(s): Social sciences | Culture -- Study and teaching | Cultural heritage | Archaeology | Social Sciences | Archaeology | Cultural Heritage | Regional and Cultural StudiesAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 930.1 LOC classification: CC1-960Online resources: Click here to access online In: Springer eBooksSummary: This monograph analyzes current cultural resource management, archeological heritage management, and exhibitionary practices and policies in the People’s Republic of China. Academic researchers, preservationists, and other interested parties face a range of challenges for the preservation of the material past as rapid economic and social changes continue in China.   On the one hand, state-supported development policies often threaten and in some cases lead to the destruction of archeological and cultural sites. Yet state cultural policies also encourage the cultivation of precisely such sites as tourism development resources. This monograph aims to bring the concepts of world heritage sites, national tourism policies, ethnic tourism, and museum display together for a general cultural heritage audience. It focuses on a central issue: the tensions between a wide range of interest groups:  cultural anthropologists and archeologists, tourism officials, heritage proponents, economic development proponents, a new class of private rich with the means to buy artifacts, and a fragmented regulatory system. Behind all of them lies the political role of heritage in China, also addressed in this monograph.  .
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This monograph analyzes current cultural resource management, archeological heritage management, and exhibitionary practices and policies in the People’s Republic of China. Academic researchers, preservationists, and other interested parties face a range of challenges for the preservation of the material past as rapid economic and social changes continue in China.   On the one hand, state-supported development policies often threaten and in some cases lead to the destruction of archeological and cultural sites. Yet state cultural policies also encourage the cultivation of precisely such sites as tourism development resources. This monograph aims to bring the concepts of world heritage sites, national tourism policies, ethnic tourism, and museum display together for a general cultural heritage audience. It focuses on a central issue: the tensions between a wide range of interest groups:  cultural anthropologists and archeologists, tourism officials, heritage proponents, economic development proponents, a new class of private rich with the means to buy artifacts, and a fragmented regulatory system. Behind all of them lies the political role of heritage in China, also addressed in this monograph.  .

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