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Zanzibar Stone Town Joins the Imagined Community of World Heritage Sites
Authors:Michael Hitchcock
Institution:1. Institute for Sport, Exercise and Active Living, Victoria University , Melbourne , Australia Leannek.white@vu.edu.au
Abstract:In 2000, Zanzibar Stone Town was added to UNESCO's World Heritage List after a long campaign whose start date may be taken as 1988. In view of the difficulties, one might ask why places such as Zanzibar should undertake such initiatives. Without recognition from UNESCO the Stone Town would be under pressure to approve developments that would change the character of this historic centre, and could make it difficult to develop tourism, but this is not the only reason. This paper argues that the supporters of Zanzibar's application to UNESCO were responding to a message that they detected in the formulation of the World Heritage Convention, namely that designated sites belong to a kind of international body which may be likened to an 'imagined community'. World Heritage Sites (WHSs) are, in theory, part of global heritage and are thus subject to the policies and laws of an international order. In reality, however, international legislation is notoriously difficult to implement without the support of the states concerned and it may be more useful to think of WHSs as an 'Imagined Community' in Anderson's sense, a kind of pre-state entity.
Keywords:World Heritage  Zanzibar  Tanzania  Post-COLONIAL  Urban Heritage
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