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Cultural Heritage in Transition: A Multi-Level Perspective on World Heritage in Germany and the United Kingdom, 1970-2020


ISBN13: 9783030937713
Published: March 2022
Publisher: Springer-Verlag
Country of Publication: Switzerland
Format: Hardback
Price: £109.99



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This book introduces the multilevel perspective to analyze how local, national, and international actors and institutions in the heritage field interact. More specifically, a comparative study is made of controversies regarding six UNESCO World Heritage sites in Germany and the United Kingdom. The six cases involve traditional monuments (the cathedral of Aachen and the castle and cathedral of Durham), industrial heritage (the Zollverein Coal Mine in Essen and the former tin and copper mines in Cornwall), and cities (Dresden and Liverpool). Studying how long-term landscape developments interact with local actors and nationally organized regimes reveals important differences between the decentralized German and the centralized British approach to heritage preservation. These differences not only have consequences for the governance of heritage preservation in the two countries, but also for their relations with international organizations such as UNESCO.

Subjects:
Art and Cultural Heritage Law
Contents:
Part I: Global and Local Challenges
Introduction: Conversations on Conservation
A History of Germany's and Britain's Heritage Regimes (1945-1972)
Part II: Traditional Monuments (1970s-1980s)
Tumultuous Times: Landscape Developments 1970-1980
Aachen Cathedral and the Beginnings of World Heritage
Who Should Pay the Bill for England's World Heritage?
World Heritage as a Game Changer?
Part III: Industrial Heritage (1980s - 1990s)
Zeche Zollverein from Eyesore to Eyecatcher?
Exploiting Cornwall's Mining Heritage
Industrial Heritage Industry
Part IV: Historic Cities (1990s - 2000s)
Challenges of the Urban Age: Landscape Developments between 1995-2010
Bridging Local Interests and International Obligations in Dresden
Shanghai-upon-Mersey: Conservation and Change in Liverpool
National Regimes, Global Cities: Urban Conservation and Heritage Regimes in Germany and Britain
Part V: Reflections
Discussion and Conclusion: Usefulness of the Multi-Level Perspective