Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast

© 2015 Tod Jones, Roy Jones and Michael Hughes As heritage research has engaged with a greater plurality of heritage practices, scale has emerged as an important concept in Heritage Studies, albeit relatively narrowly defined as hierarchical levels (household, local, national, etcetera). This paper...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jones, Tod, Jones, R., Hughes, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5427
_version_ 1848744793829539840
author Jones, Tod
Jones, R.
Hughes, M.
author_facet Jones, Tod
Jones, R.
Hughes, M.
author_sort Jones, Tod
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2015 Tod Jones, Roy Jones and Michael Hughes As heritage research has engaged with a greater plurality of heritage practices, scale has emerged as an important concept in Heritage Studies, albeit relatively narrowly defined as hierarchical levels (household, local, national, etcetera). This paper argues for a definition of scale in heritage research that incorporates size (geographical scale), level (vertical scale) and relation (an understanding that scale is constituted through dynamic relationships in specific contexts). The paper utilises this definition of scale to analyse heritage designation first through consideration of changing World Heritage processes, and then through a case study of the world heritage designation of the Ningaloo Coast region in Western Australia. Three key findings are: both scale and heritage gain appeal because they are abstractions, and gain definition through the spatial politics of interrelationships within specific situations; the spatial politics of heritage designation comes into focus through attention to those configurations of size, level and relation that are invoked and enabled in heritage processes; and researchers choice to analyse or ignore particular scales and scalar politics are political decisions. Utilising scale as size, level and relation enables analyses that move beyond heritage to the spatial politics through which all heritage is constituted.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T06:07:07Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-5427
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T06:07:07Z
publishDate 2015
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-54272018-12-14T00:46:21Z Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast Jones, Tod Jones, R. Hughes, M. © 2015 Tod Jones, Roy Jones and Michael Hughes As heritage research has engaged with a greater plurality of heritage practices, scale has emerged as an important concept in Heritage Studies, albeit relatively narrowly defined as hierarchical levels (household, local, national, etcetera). This paper argues for a definition of scale in heritage research that incorporates size (geographical scale), level (vertical scale) and relation (an understanding that scale is constituted through dynamic relationships in specific contexts). The paper utilises this definition of scale to analyse heritage designation first through consideration of changing World Heritage processes, and then through a case study of the world heritage designation of the Ningaloo Coast region in Western Australia. Three key findings are: both scale and heritage gain appeal because they are abstractions, and gain definition through the spatial politics of interrelationships within specific situations; the spatial politics of heritage designation comes into focus through attention to those configurations of size, level and relation that are invoked and enabled in heritage processes; and researchers choice to analyse or ignore particular scales and scalar politics are political decisions. Utilising scale as size, level and relation enables analyses that move beyond heritage to the spatial politics through which all heritage is constituted. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5427 10.1080/13527258.2015.1120226 fulltext
spellingShingle Jones, Tod
Jones, R.
Hughes, M.
Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast
title Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast
title_full Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast
title_fullStr Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast
title_full_unstemmed Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast
title_short Heritage designation and scale: a World Heritage case study of the Ningaloo Coast
title_sort heritage designation and scale: a world heritage case study of the ningaloo coast
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5427