Skip to main content
Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services

Amsterdam University Press

Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

8. Protection and management of Spanish archaeological-historical landscapes. Possibilities and perspectives for the application of a protective and developmental approach

  • and
© 2019 Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam

© 2019 Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Table of Contents v
  3. Preface xi
  4. I. Introduction
  5. 1. The Cultural Landscape and Heritage Paradox. Protection and Development of the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape and its European Dimension 3
  6. II. Insights and Prospects of Archeological-Historical Landscape Studies
  7. 1. Introduction to ‘Protecting and Developing the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape’ (PDL/BBO) 19
  8. 2. Planning the past. Lessons to be learned from ‘Protecting and Developing the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape’ (PDL/BBO) 21
  9. 3. Actors and orders: the shaping of landscapes and identities 53
  10. III. Linking Knowledge and Action
  11. 1. Linking knowledge to action: an introduction 69
  12. 2. The cultural biography of landscape as a tool for action research in the Drentsche Aa National Landscape (Northern Netherlands) 83
  13. 3. From inventory to identity? Constructing the Lahemaa National Park’s (Estonia) regional cultural heritage 115
  14. 4. A biography of the cultural landscape in the eastern Netherlands: theory and practice of acquisition and propagation of knowledge 133
  15. 5. The protection and management of the historic landscape in Scotland in the context of the European Landscape Convention 151
  16. 6. Assessing in situ preservation of archaeological wetland sites by chemical analysis of botanical remains and micromorphology 161
  17. 7. The ancient quarry and mining district between the Eifel and the Rhine: aims and progress of the Vulkanpark Osteifel Project 177
  18. IV. Imagination-Facts and Constructions
  19. 1. Imagination: facts and constructions. About imagination, authenticity and identity, and the value of interpretative heritage research 189
  20. 2. From Oer-IJ estuary to metropolitan coastal landscape. Assessing and preserving archaeological-historical resources from 4000 years of living between land and water 203
  21. 3. Two sorting-machines for the Oer-IJ 239
  22. 4. Images, attitudes and measures in the field of cultural heritage in Norway 263
  23. 5. The good, the bad and the self-referential. Heritage planning and the productivity of difference 273
  24. 6. Interpretative heritage research and the politics of democratization and de-democratization. As illustrated by the plight of hard-working amateurs in the trenches of revamped policy arrangements 291
  25. 7. Past pictures. Landscape visualization with digital tools 309
  26. 8. Gazing at places we have never been. Landscape, heritage and identity. A comment on Jörg Rekittke & Philip Paar: ‘Past Pictures. Landscape visualization with digital tools’ 321
  27. 9. ‘Green’ and ‘blue’ developments. Prospects for research and conservation of early prehistoric hunter-gatherer landscapes 329
  28. 10. Presentation, appreciation and conservation of liminal landscapes: challenges from an Irish perspective (in response to the contribution by Bjørn Smit) 339
  29. 11. My Story – your Story: three levels for reflecting and debating the relationship between contemporary archaeological heritage management and the public. A comment from Germany 351
  30. V. Sharing Knowledge-Stories, Maps and Design
  31. 1. Introduction: sharing knowledge - stories, maps and design 365
  32. 2. Revitalizing history: moving from historical landscape reconstructions to heritage practices in the southern Netherlands 387
  33. 3. The role of historical expertise in today’s heritage management, landscape development and spatial planning 407
  34. 4. The potential of remote sensing, magnetometry and geochemical prospection in the characterization and inspection of archaeological sites and landscapes in the Netherlands 415
  35. 5. New developments in archaeological predictive modelling 431
  36. 6. Cultural heritage in environmental impact assessment – reflections from England and northwest Europe 445
  37. 7. On the necessity of congruent meanings in archaeological heritage management. An analysis of three case studies from a policy science perspective 461
  38. 8. Protection and management of Spanish archaeological-historical landscapes. Possibilities and perspectives for the application of a protective and developmental approach 477
  39. 9. Knowledge and legal action: a plea for conservation. Comment on ‘Protection and management of Spanish archaeological-historical landscapes. Possibilities and perspectives for the application of a protective and developmental approach’ by María Ruiz del Árbol & Almudena Orejas 493
  40. VI. Synthesis and Conclusions
  41. What have we learnt? 503
  42. VII. Management of Knowledge
  43. 1. The management of knowledge for integrative landscape research: an introduction 521
  44. 2. Elephant and Delta. In search of practical guidelines for interdisciplinary and strategic research 529
  45. 3. LANDMARKS. A project based on transnational and interdisciplinary scientific co-operation 545
  46. 4. The Planarch experience 557
  47. 5. Management of knowledge within the international and intersectoral research project ‘Cultural Landscapes 565
  48. 6. ‘Changing Landscapes’: an interdisciplinary Danish research centre 577
  49. 7. The PDL/BBO research programme analysed from the perspective of knowledge management 585
  50. 8. Cultural landscapes in the mirror. What information systems reveal about information management and cultural landscape research 605
  51. VIII. Agenda for the Future
  52. 1. Agenda for the future. What do we see and what do we take? 631
  53. 2. Heritage policy in spatial planning 641
  54. 3. Changing landscapes of archaeology and heritage 653
  55. IX. Summary 671
  56. X. Appendix
  57. 1. List of selected abbreviations 677
  58. 2. Glossary of specific subject-related concepts and terms used in this book 679
  59. 3. Protecting and Developing the Dutch Archaeological-Historical Landscape/Bodemarchief in Behoud en Ontwikkeling (PDL/BBO): projects and programmes 685
  60. 4. List of authors, fields of activity and addresses 693
  61. Subject index 729
  62. Index of places and regions 737
Downloaded on 29.4.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9789048510962-031/html?lang=en
Scroll to top button