Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region

The development and management of heritage sites, including prehistorical and historical archaeological sites, trading posts and aboriginal traditional-use sites, is of interest to governments for their potential in the fields of tourism, youth employment and economic development. In Canada, the iss...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Julig, Patrick
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Laurentian University Press, Sudbury, Ontario 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/161
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spelling ftlaurentian:oai:zone.biblio.laurentian.ca:10219/161 2023-08-20T04:06:31+02:00 Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region Julig, Patrick 1999 application/pdf https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/161 en eng Laurentian University Press, Sudbury, Ontario Julig, Patrick J. (1999) "Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region". In La nature et la loi. Le pluralisme juridique dans la gestion de la nature = Nature and Law. Legal Pluralism in Environmental Stewardship. François-Xavier Ribordy (ed.). Laurentian University Press, Sudbury, Ontario. https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/161 heritage sites First Nations original culture archaeology Book chapter 1999 ftlaurentian 2023-07-31T10:21:40Z The development and management of heritage sites, including prehistorical and historical archaeological sites, trading posts and aboriginal traditional-use sites, is of interest to governments for their potential in the fields of tourism, youth employment and economic development. In Canada, the issues of rights, ownership and management decisions for such sites are still in contention as multiple cultures (Aboriginal, French, English) may have occupied and used these sites either successively or concurrently. The First Nations often have some claim to these sites as they are of the original culture, but the government ministries at national and provincial levels maintain some control via heritage legislation. Increasingly, the First Nations are exercising their claim to a voice in the development of such heritage resources, and co-management agreements appear to be the most successful arrangements. Examples of successfully co-managed projects will be evaluated with respect to future development in the cultural heritage sector and the prospects for a World Heritage site designation in the Great Lakes region will be examined. Book Part First Nations LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University Canada
institution Open Polar
collection LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University
op_collection_id ftlaurentian
language English
topic heritage sites
First Nations
original culture
archaeology
spellingShingle heritage sites
First Nations
original culture
archaeology
Julig, Patrick
Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region
topic_facet heritage sites
First Nations
original culture
archaeology
description The development and management of heritage sites, including prehistorical and historical archaeological sites, trading posts and aboriginal traditional-use sites, is of interest to governments for their potential in the fields of tourism, youth employment and economic development. In Canada, the issues of rights, ownership and management decisions for such sites are still in contention as multiple cultures (Aboriginal, French, English) may have occupied and used these sites either successively or concurrently. The First Nations often have some claim to these sites as they are of the original culture, but the government ministries at national and provincial levels maintain some control via heritage legislation. Increasingly, the First Nations are exercising their claim to a voice in the development of such heritage resources, and co-management agreements appear to be the most successful arrangements. Examples of successfully co-managed projects will be evaluated with respect to future development in the cultural heritage sector and the prospects for a World Heritage site designation in the Great Lakes region will be examined.
format Book Part
author Julig, Patrick
author_facet Julig, Patrick
author_sort Julig, Patrick
title Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region
title_short Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region
title_full Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region
title_fullStr Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region
title_full_unstemmed Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region
title_sort archaeological theme parks, public archaeology, and living museums: prospects for the upper great lakes region
publisher Laurentian University Press, Sudbury, Ontario
publishDate 1999
url https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/161
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation Julig, Patrick J. (1999) "Archaeological Theme Parks, Public Archaeology, and Living Museums: Prospects for the Upper Great Lakes Region". In La nature et la loi. Le pluralisme juridique dans la gestion de la nature = Nature and Law. Legal Pluralism in Environmental Stewardship. François-Xavier Ribordy (ed.). Laurentian University Press, Sudbury, Ontario.
https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/dspace/handle/10219/161
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