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This timely and innovative book critically explores how cultural heritage in the global south can be used to mobilise community engagement and promote sustainable tourism at archaeological sites.
List of contents
1. Introduction
Part 1. Asia 2. The Faynan Heritage Project: Developing a Local Museum Within a Rural Bedouin Community of Southern Jordan 3. Developing a Heritage-themed Bedouin Handicraft Business in Faynan, Jordan: Success, Failure and Reflections 4. Community-based Conservation and Promotion of the Neolithic Site of Beidha, Jordan 5. SELA: Community and Heritage in Jordan 6. The Land of Nineveh Archaeological Project: Cultural Heritage Protection and Enhancement, Community Engagement and Sustainable Tourism in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq 7. Building Community Archaeology Practice and Heritage Tourism for Sustainable Development in a Post-Conflict Zone: The ACT and ALIPH Projects in the Swat Valley (Pakistan) 8. Initiating the Transformation of Spanish Colonial Era Archaeology of Cagayan Province, Philippines, into Cultural Heritage
Part 2. Africa 9. Community and Archaeology at Armana: Exploring Sustainable Heritage Strategies for Rural Egypt 10. Community-Engaged Archaeology at the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Jebel Barkal, Sudan 11. Co-Production Networks for Community Heritage in Tanzania (CONCH)
Part 3. Central and South America 12. Santa Cruz Mixtepec: Community Engagement and Religious Heritage in Mexico 13. Biocultural Heritage and Archaeology as Sources of Knowledge, Cultural Identity, Sustainable Tourism and Economic Resilience in Ligüiqui, Manabí, Ecuador 14. The PIARA Peru Project at Hualcayán: An Archaeology and Partnership of Care 15. Utilising Cultural Heritage to Improve Water Security and Agro-Pastoral Farming in the Peruvian Andes
Part 4. Overview 16. Experiences, Lessons, Celebration
About the author
Steven Mithen, FBA, is Professor of Early Prehistory at the University of Reading, UK. His research interests include the origins of language, music, and thought, hunter-gatherers and the emergence of farming. He has undertaken long-term field projects in southern Jordan and Western Scotland and is a founding member of a local charity in Scotland (Islay Heritage, SCO46938). His books include
The Prehistory of the Mind (1996),
After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000-5000 BC (2003),
The Singing Neanderthals (2005),
Third: Water and Power in the Ancient World (2007) and
The Language Puzzle (2024).
Mubariz Ahmed Rabbani conducts research on the archaeology of South Asia, with an interest in ancient technologies, socio-economic and political organisation, trade, religion, and human-environmental relationships. He completed his PhD in archaeology at the University of Reading and worked on excavations in Pakistan, Iraq, and the UK. He is a member of the ISMEO Italian Archaeological Mission in Pakistan.
Maria Rabbani is a Palynologist for Oxford Archaeology. She completed her PhD at the University of Reading, which focussed on human-environmental interactions in the Zagros region during the Late Pleniglacial, Lateglacial and Holocene, using pollen, non-pollen palynomorph, micro-and macro-charcoal and geochemical analyses. Maria has experience in working on lake and wetland sediment and pollen from the UK, Italy, Iran and Iraq.