Heritage justice
Heritage justice
Heritage Justice explores how far past wrongs can be remedied through compensatory mechanisms involving material culture. The Element goes beyond a critique of global heritage brokers such as UNESCO, the ICC and museums as redundant, Eurocentric and elitist to explore why these institutions have become the focus for debates about global heritage justice. Three broad modes of compensatory mechanisms are identified: recognition, economic reparation and return. Arguing against Jenkins (2016) that museums should not be the site for difficult conversations about the past, Heritage Justice proposes that it is exactly the space around objects and sites created by museums and global institutions that allows for conversations about future dignity. The challenge for cultural practitioners is to broaden out ideas of material identity beyond source communities, private property and economic value to encompass dynamic global shifts in mobility and connectivity.
Cambridge University Press
Joy, Charlotte
0fb29802-c853-43eb-b78f-601e49d9f776
19 November 2020
Joy, Charlotte
0fb29802-c853-43eb-b78f-601e49d9f776
Joy, Charlotte
(2020)
Heritage justice
(Elements in Critical Heritage Studies),
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Heritage Justice explores how far past wrongs can be remedied through compensatory mechanisms involving material culture. The Element goes beyond a critique of global heritage brokers such as UNESCO, the ICC and museums as redundant, Eurocentric and elitist to explore why these institutions have become the focus for debates about global heritage justice. Three broad modes of compensatory mechanisms are identified: recognition, economic reparation and return. Arguing against Jenkins (2016) that museums should not be the site for difficult conversations about the past, Heritage Justice proposes that it is exactly the space around objects and sites created by museums and global institutions that allows for conversations about future dignity. The challenge for cultural practitioners is to broaden out ideas of material identity beyond source communities, private property and economic value to encompass dynamic global shifts in mobility and connectivity.
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Published date: 19 November 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 511443
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511443
PURE UUID: c9caafe6-7ae2-4112-b997-d47f7d5a96e8
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Date deposited: 14 May 2026 16:42
Last modified: 15 May 2026 02:10
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Author:
Charlotte Joy
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