This edited volume offers an in-depth study of heritage and warfare from the perspective of defence studies.
The book focuses on how, in different contexts, heritage can be a catalyst and target of conflict, an obstacle to stabilisation, and a driver of peace-building. It documents the changing role of heritage – in terms of both exploitation and protection – in various military capabilities, theatres, and operations. With particular concern for the areas of subthreshold and hybrid warfare, stabilisation, cultural relationships, human security, and disaster response, the volume reviews the historical relationship between heritage and armed conflict, including the roles of embedded archaeologists, safeguarding of ethics, and dislodgement and destruction of material culture. Various chapters in the book also demonstrate the value of understanding how state and non-state actors exploit cultural heritage across different defence postures and within both subthreshold and proxy warfare in order to achieve military, political, economic, and diplomatic advantages.
This book will be of interest to students of defence studies, heritage studies, anthropology and security studies in general, as well as military practitioners.
Author(s): Timothy Clack, Mark Dunkley
Series: Routledge Advances in Defence Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 343
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Table of Contents
List of figures
List of contributors
Foreword
Preface
Introduction: Culture, heritage, conflict
PART I The past on parade
1 Heritage and the (re)shaping of social identities in conflict cycles: anchor or quicksand?
2 Napoleon, savants, and the Description de l’Égypte: capturing history
3 Military cultural property protection from Hague 1907 to Hague 1954
4 Cultural property protection in the 21st century: the privilege of working with the most deployed division
PART II The past as propaganda
5 Islamist terrorist targeting of contemporary Western culture: ‘deviant chaos'
6 The Russian weaponisation of cultural heritage
7 Heritage as a focus in US-Iran tensions: implications for aspects of culture and power in modern warfare
PART III The past as peacekeeper
8 Museums and the restitution of ‘spoils of war'
9 Cultural property protection: the work of the Blue Shield
10 Cultural heritage and peacebuilding in Rakhine State, Myanmar
11 An excavation of the Bullecourt battlefield: from mud through blood to the green fields beyond?
PART IV The practice of protection
12 Integrating cultural heritage into civil affairs operations: reinventing the monuments men and women for the 21st-century force
13 Rescuing heritage in ‘natural’ disasters
14 Culture, heritage, security: an interview with Colonel Rosie Stone, Captain Mark Waring, Major Anne Seton- Sykes, and Major Luke Wattam
Index