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Mapping out emerging areas for global cultural heritage, this book
provides an anthropological perspective on the growing field of
heritage studies. Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels adopts a dual
focus--looking back on the anthropological foundations for cultural
heritage research while looking forward to areas of practice that
reach beyond national borders: economic development, climate
action, democratic practice, heritage rights, and global justice.
Working around the traditional authority of the nation-state and
intergovernmental treaty-based organizations such as UNESCO, these
issues characterize heritage activity in transnational networks.
Lafrenz Samuels argues that transnational heritage involves an
important shift from a paradigm of preservation to a paradigm of
development. Responding to this expanding developmental
sensibility, she positions cultural heritage as a persuasive tool
for transformative action, capable of mobilizing and shaping social
change. She shows how anthropological approaches help support the
persuasive power of heritage in the transnational sphere.
Examining cultural heritage within the context of democracyCultural
heritage is a powerful tool in society, capable of producing both
social harms as well as social goods and benefits, which can be
distributed unevenly via political channels. Reaching across
disciplines and national boundaries, this volume examines cultural
heritage work within the context of both democratic institutions
and democratic practices, including participatory, deliberative,
and direct democratic practices. Case studies highlight how
democratic politics and cultural heritage shape, impact, and depend
upon one another. The rising crisis of democracy across the globe
brings these dynamics into sharp relief. The unfinished and fragile
nature of democratic politics shines a spotlight on both its
shortcomings and its aspirational potential. This is a paradox that
heritage practitioners and stakeholders navigate daily, serving as
both critics and collaborators of democracy. At the same time that
heritage practice embraces participatory approaches, it must also
address the challenge of reconciling multiple, often unequal, and
frequently incompatible claims for control over heritage. Grappling
with democracy's crises also increasingly means recognizing the
power of heritage to reinforce or undermine democracy. These essays
ask: What are the democratic motives of heritage practice? Why do
democracies need heritage? How do the social and cultural referents
of heritage infuse democratic practices? Emphasizing the interplay
of heritage and democracy in practices and institutions across
scales of governance, Heritage and Democracy pinpoints a dynamic
that has not been widely examined. A volume in the series Cultural
Heritage Studies, edited by Paul A. Shackel
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