Resolving Conflicts in Heritage Tourism: A Public Interest Approach

  • Porter B
  • Salazar N
  • Sanday P
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Abstract

This special issue explores how and why conflicts arise in the development and practice of heritage tourism. From New York City’s Ground Zero and the archaeological site of Chichén Itzá in Yucatan, Mexico, to an Underground Railroad site in Pennsylvania and a post-industrial Massachusetts town, the authors of these four articles are concerned with identifying the often overlapping interests of stakeholders in their attempts to gain access to and guide the development of heritage resources. This issue grows out of a 2003 symposium entitled ‘Resolving Conflicts in Heritage Tourism: A Public Interest Anthropology Approach’, at the 102nd annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in Chicago, Illinois, organised by Dr Peggy Reeves Sanday, Noel Salazar, and Benjamin Porter of the University of Pennsylvania. The symposium encouraged scholars to consider heritage apart from official and ‘top-down’ definitions as well as how an emerging methodological approach, public interest anthropology, could be applied to the analysis of heritage conflicts.

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Porter, B., Salazar, N. B., & Sanday, P. (2004). Resolving Conflicts in Heritage Tourism: A Public Interest Approach. Anthropology News, 45(2), 44–45. Retrieved from https://lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/198967

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