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Conflict in common: Heritage-making in Cape York

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posted on 2024-11-14, 18:47 authored by Nicholas Skilton, Michael AdamsMichael Adams, Leah GibbsLeah Gibbs
The outstanding natural and cultural values of Cape York have been acknowledged for decades, but those decades have been characterised by deep conflict. Non-government organisation intervention in local politics has seen a forceful push for nominating some or all of the Cape York Peninsula as a World Heritage Site. We illuminate the authorised heritage discourse at work in heritage-making, and highlight contested issues of ownership, governance, authenticity, and value. These themes contribute to the possibility of marginalising the voices of local people who wish to contribute to heritage-making in Cape York. Politics infuses all aspects of heritage-making in Cape York, and the specific experiences on Cape York reflect larger political processes occurring in World Heritage discourse. The paper draws on interviews undertaken in May and June 2012.

History

Citation

Skilton, N., Adams, M. & Gibbs, L. (2014). Conflict in common: Heritage-making in Cape York. Australian Geographer, 45 (2), 147-166.

Journal title

Australian Geographer

Volume

45

Issue

2

Pagination

147-166

Language

English

RIS ID

90135

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