Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-10-2024
Department
Department of Social Sciences
Abstract
Purpose: Industrial heritage works within a world of contradictions, contentions and scalar liminality. Archaeologists and historians focus upon oral histories and discourses of tangible and intangible memory and heritage while planners and economists see industrial World Heritage, in particular, as a marketing ploy to redevelop deindustrialized spaces. Within this liminality, we explore the potential for geographical perspectives to solder such contradictions into transdisciplinary heritage assessments and tourism contexts. How might the spatial tools of landscape and scalar analyses expose alternative and sustainable futures within broader patterns of industrial heritage management and consumption?
Design/methodology/approach: Using three comparative cases, interview and landscape methods and conducting discourse analysis within a spatial and scalar framework, we explore the increasing presence of industrial World Heritage.
Findings: We present both an institutional reflection upon the complexities of heritage discourse across complex spatial configurations and the intersectional historical, cultural, political, environmental and economic geographies that guide and emerge out of World Heritage Designations. Framed scalarly and spatially, we highlight common interpretation, tourism and heritage management styles and concerns found across industrial World Heritage. We point out trans-scalar considerations for future municipalities and regions looking to utilize their industrial landscapes and narratives.
Originality/value: We believe that more theoretical groundings in space and scale may lead to both the flexibility and the applicability needed to assess and, in turn, manage trans-scalar and trans-spatial complex heritage sites. These perspectives may be uniquely poised to assess the complex geographies of industrial, particularly mining, World Heritage Sites.
Publication Title
Journal of Tourism Futures
Recommended Citation
Rhodes, M. A.,
&
Hannum, K. L.
(2024).
UNESCO, Mining Heritage and the Scalar Sustainability of Tourism Geographies at Industrial World Heritage Sites.
Journal of Tourism Futures.
http://doi.org/10.1108/JTF-10-2023-0235
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p2/1110
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.