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Book Cover
Book
Author International Society for Ecological Economics. Meeting (2000 : Australian National University)

Title Heritage economics : challenges for heritage conservation and sustainable development in the 21st century, 4 July 2000, Australian National University, Canberra : conference proceedings
Published Canberra : Australian Heritage Commission, [2001]
©2001

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  363.690994 Int/Hec  AVAILABLE
 WATERFT ART&ARCH  363.690994 Int/Hec  AVAILABLE
Description ii, 246 pages ; 30 cm
Contents Foreword -- Cultural Heritage: an economic value not fully realised -- Speech by Mr Bruce Leaver, Executive Director The Australian Heritage Commission -- to the ISEE 2000 Pre?Conference Workshop, Tuesday 4 July 2000 -- Conceptualising Heritage as Cultural Capital -- David Throsby, Professor of Economics, Macquarie University -- Travel Will Change the World -- Tor Hundloe, Professor of Environmental Management, The University of Queensland -- The Role of Economics in Natural Heritage Decision Making -- Mick Common; Graduate School of Environmental Studies, University of Strathclyde, -- United Kingdom -- Natural Heritage Valuation Methods: Applications to Cultural Heritage -- Jeff Bennett,# The Australian National University -- Cattle grazing in the Alpine National Park: preserving natural or cultural heritage? -- Anthony Chisholm and lain Fraser
Indigenous Heritage Tourism and its Economic Value in Australia -- Heather Zeppel, Lecturer, Tourism Program, School of Business, James Cook -- University, Cairns -- The Economic Benefits of Heritage Restoration -- David Cotterill, Sinclair Knight Merz; Tomas Nohel, Heritage Victoria -- Paper Presented by: David Cotterill, Sinclair Knight Merz -- The economic rationale for adaptive reuse?case study of the North Head -- Quarantine Station -- Simon McArthur, Creative Director, Mawland Hotel Management -- Valuing the Public Benefits of Heritage Listing of Commercial Buildings -- Dr. Peter Abelson, Macquarie University -- Urban Heritage Revitalisation?Adaptive Reuse in the Wider Policy Context -- Roz Hansen, Director, Hansen Partnership Pty Ltd, Planning & Development -- Management Consultants, Adjunct Professor, Faculty of Arts, Deakin University
Integrated Heritage Management: Dealing with Principles, Conflict, Trust and -- Reconciling Stakeholder Differences -- C. Michael Hall, Centre for Tourism, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand -- Conserving Cultural Heritage Values in Natural Areas: the Australian Experience -- Ms Jane Lennon, Heritage Consultant, Lennon & Associates, Commissioner, The Australian Heritage Commission -- The role and relevance of Indigenous cultural capital in environment management in Australia and the Pacific -- Padma Lal and Elspeth Young, Graduate Studies in Environment Management and Development, National Centre for Development Studies, The Australian National University
Regional economic impacts of tourism in heritage mining towns -- Professor Trevor Mules, Tourism Program, University of Canberra, Australia -- The Loss of Regional Heritage and the Development of Regional Heritage Tourism in Western Countries: a Re?occurring Paradox? -- Professor R.W. Butler, School of Management Studies, University of Surrey, Guildford, -- BTR Research Relevant to Heritage Tourism: Past Findings and Future Potential -- Dr Peter Robins, Bureau of Tourism Research, Canberra -- Articulating the Heritage Tourism Resource in Coastal Towns: a Case Study of -- Noosa -- Daniel O'Hare, BTP (Hons) NSW MA (Urban Design) OxfPoly PhD Oxford Brookes, -- School of Planning, Landscape Architecture, and Surveying, Queensland University of -- Technology
Value conflicts between natural and cultural heritage conservation?Australian experience and the contribution of economics -- Michael Lockwood & Dirk H.R. Spennemann, Johnstone Centre and School of Environmental & Information Sciences,Charles Sturt University -- Opportunities and needs: A research agenda for Heritage Economics Research -- Mike Young, Workshop Chair and President Australia New Zealand Society for Ecological Economics
Summary Australia's heritage places have been shaped by natural and cultural processes and by historic events to endow Australians with an inheritance of heritage assets. Australia has biodiversity described as megadiverse, a continuous Indigenous culture spanning more than 60 000 years and a rich history of European settlement over the last two centuries. In addition Australia has become a home to migrants from a wide range of cultures leading to a richness in tradition and cultural diversity. The importance of heritage conservation is apparent, however it must compete for government funding with issues such as unemployment, education and health care. It is important that we find ways to communicate both the intrinsic value of heritage and its economic benefits to the wider community. Heritage economics can facilitate such communication and may also lead to the development of new ways of ensuring the viability of heritage. The Australian Heritage Commission has already begun to examine some of these opportunities and has produced a regional heritage tourism strategy in response to the recommendations of the Regional Australia Summit Communique. The Australian Heritage Commission has taken an active role in stimulating research and debate in the area of heritage economics. This publication explores a wide range of methodologies and covers subjects from metropolitan buildings to the cultural and natural values of Australia's alpine region. It is my hope that this work will provoke debate and further research and that the field of heritage economics will increasingly contribute to the identification and ongoing conservation of Australia's heritage for future and current Australians. -- Peter King Chairman Australian Heritage Commission
Notes "ISEE 2000" -- Cover
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Also available online via the World Wide Web
Australian Heritage Commission Australia 2001
Subject Cultural property -- Protection -- Economic aspects -- Congresses.
Cultural property -- Protection -- Economic aspects -- Australia -- Congresses.
Cultural property -- Protection -- Economic aspects -- Australia.
Cultural property -- Australia -- Congresses.
Heritage tourism -- Australia -- Congresses.
Historic buildings -- Conservation and restoration -- Congresses.
Historic buildings -- Conservation and restoration -- Australia -- Congresses.
Historic buildings -- Conservation and restoration -- Australia.
Historic buildings -- Australia -- Conservation and preservation -- Congresses
Historic buildingsxConservation and restoration -- Australia -- Congresses
Historic sites -- Conservation and restoration -- Congresses.
Historic sites -- Conservation and restoration -- Australia -- Congresses.
Historic sites -- Australia -- Conservation and preservation -- Congresses
Historic sites -- Conservation and restoration -- Australia.
Sustainable development -- Congresses.
Sustainable development -- Australia -- Congresses.
Sustainable development -- Australia.
Genre/Form Conference papers and proceedings.
Author Australian Heritage Commission.
ISBN 0642547408
Other Titles Challenges for heritage conservation and sustainable development in the 21st century, 4 July 2000, Australian National University, Canberra : conference proceedings