1. Looking into the ‘black box’ of heritage protection: analysis of conservation area disputes in London through the eyes of planning inspectors.
- Author
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Mualam, Nir and Alterman, Rachelle
- Subjects
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CULTURAL property , *PROTECTION of cultural property , *HISTORIC buildings , *HISTORIC preservation , *PRESERVATION of cultural property , *PRESERVATION of historic buildings , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The paper analyses conflicts associated with policies to protect the built heritage. Such conflicts relate to a host of tensions between private and public concerns and specifically between pro-development and pro-conservation approaches. To examine these cleavages, the paper operationalises private and public concerns over heritage by asking if there is a recognisable set of justifications that policy-makers use for supporting a pro-conservation or alternatively a pro-development approach? To do this, the paper looks at appeals decided by Her Majesty’s Planning Inspectors in London. The findings show that although they are not dichotomous, public and private interests in heritage development can be factually recognised in the setting of appeals. Moreover, the paper finds that Planning Inspectors often channel conflicts through the prism of certain public interests, namely, protecting architectural and physical attributes of the building and its surroundings. Although inspectors are instructed to actively weigh in other (potentially overriding) considerations in heritage appeals, such as socio-economic and proprietary issues, these considerations do not appear to have the same standing within the decision-making process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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