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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of travel. They are relevant but also visionary.This insightful Research Agenda examines the multidimensional relationship between heritage planning and pressing current societal challenges around climate, identity and development. Mapping future avenues for the field, it suggests new approaches to executing, studying and reflecting on heritage planning. Expert international contributors raise key questions that challenge practice and research to push for structural and institutional change, highlighting how heritage planning, conservation, and adaptive reuse have transformative potential - and the responsibilities that come with such potential. Chapters explore central topics including industrial heritage and conservation planning, digital reconstruction methods and remote sensing technologies, rural tourism, participation and heritage-led regeneration, as well as issues around contestation and politicization, and the conceptualisations of heritage planning.Spanning the domains of theoretical and empirical insights, from academic outlooks to professional challenges, this Research Agenda will be a vital resource for academics and students of urban and human geography, heritage studies, planning, urban design and architecture. Its examination of particular heritage projects will also be useful for policy makers and professionals working in the heritage planning field.
Edited by Eva Stegmeijer, Researcher, Cultural Heritage Agency of the Netherlands, Ministry of Education, Culture and Science and Loes Veldpaus, Lecturer, School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape, Newcastle University, UK
Contents:Foreword: some key challenges for heritage science research xixPART I SETTING THE SCENE FOR HERITAGEPLANNING: PERSPECTIVES FROM EUROPE1 Introduction to A Research Agenda for HeritagePlanning: the state of heritage planning in Europe 31Eva Stegmeijer, Loes Veldpaus and Joks Janssen2 Heritage research in the 21st century: departingfrom the useful futures of sustainable develoment 49Višnja Kisić3 The value of heritage in sustainable developmentand spatial planning 67Koenraad Van Balen and Aziliz VandesandePART II CURRENT RESEARCH IN HERITAGEPLANNING: PROJECTS FROM EUROPESECTION A HERITAGE AND IDENTITY4 Introduction to heritage and identity: fromplanning and policies to communities, and back 85Remi Wacogne5 Exploring archaeology’s place in participatoryEuropean cultural landscape management:perspectives from the ‘REFIT’ project 89Tom Moore and Gemma Tully6 Industrial heritage and conservation planning,changing governance practices, examples from Europe 103Loes Veldpaus and Remi Wacogne7 Developing participation through digitalreconstruction and communication of ‘lost’ heritage 115Laura Loredana Micoli, Gabriele Guidi, PabloRodríguez-Gonzálvez, Diego González-Aguilera8 Cultural heritage and European identity inEuropean Union law and policy 127Francesca Fiorentini, Kristin Hausler and AndrzejJakubowskiSECTION B HERITAGE AND CLIMATE9 Introduction to heritage and climate change:current gaps and scientific challenges 143Claudio Margottini10 New uses for old waterways 149Francesco Vallerani and Francesco Visentin11 Satellite monitoring of geo-hazards affectingcultural heritage 161Daniele Spizzichino and Claudio Margottini12 Archaeological site monitoring and riskassessment using remote sensing technologies and GIS 171Stefano De Angeli and Fabiana BattistinSECTION C HERITAGE AND DEVELOPMENT13 Introduction to heritage and development:the agency of heritage in rural and urbandevelopment practices 183Annelie Sjölander-Lindqvist14 Cultural heritage and improvised music inEuropean festivals 189Tony Whyton and Beth Perry15 Cultural heritage at work for economy and society 201Stefano Della Torre and Rossella Moioli16 Gastronomy and creative entrepreneurship inrural tourism: encouraging sustainable communitydevelopment 213Annelie Sjölander-Lindqvist, Anna de Jong, RomàGarrido Puig, Giuseppa Romeo and Wilhelm SkoglundPART III RESEARCH AGENDA FOR HERITAGEPLANNING. PERSPECTIVES FOR EUROPE(AND BEYOND)17 Towards a more just world: an agenda fortransformative heritage planning futures 227Loes Veldpaus, Višnja Kisić, Eva Stegmeijer andJoks JanssenIndex
‘A Research Agenda for Heritage Planning: Perspectives from Europe the book by Eva Stegmeijer and Loes Veldpaus brings new dialogues and bridges the dichotomy of an “east” and “west” understanding of heritage that has been taken for granted as two different dichotomies. This book offers an insight on how the western world itself is also not homogenous in the understanding of what heritage is and heritage is not always tangible in the “west”. This book shows readers that there is no universal European understanding of heritage and planning. Only in specific divisions of European countries and mostly in urban contexts does so-called European heritage understanding dominate the discourse and planning. This book aims to not only elaborate on heritage planning and research in Europe, but also push beyond a Eurocentric approach, and examine the research this approach produces and the foundation on which it is developed, as well as give funding to the projects and people who work in this field.’