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The Green LInes Institute and the Organising Committee wish to thank all the academics and researchers that accepted to join the Scientific Committee of Heritage 2010.
Other international academics and researchers will join the Scientific Committee soon.
| Jun Akamine |
Nagoya City University - Japan |
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Dr. Akamine was once trained as a descriptive linguist among Philippine
languages. He has later become interested in human ecology especially
interaction between international coral reef conservation effort and local
resource exploiting practices. |
| Gregory Ashworth |
University of Groningen - The Netherlands |
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Gregory Ashworth is professor of Heritage Management and Urban Tourism in the Faculty of
Spatial Sciences, University of Groningen, Netherlands. His fields of interest are
heritage theory and practice, urban tourism and place marketing. |
| Angela Barrios Padura |
University of Seville - Spain |
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Angela Barrios Padura is Architect (1996), PhD in Architecture (2001), in a doctoral program about Theoretical and Practical contents of Urban and Architectural Restoration. Professor in the Higher Technical School of Architecture in Seville, Spain since 1997.
Professor in the Official Master’s Degree in Sustainable Architecture and City since 2005.
Investigator in both Restoration and Sustainable Construction matters. |
| Alexander Bauer |
City University of New York - United States of America |
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Alexander A. Bauer is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Queens College, City University of New York. His research interests include Old World prehistory, ancient trade, semiotics, and cultural heritage policy. Since 2005, he has served as Editor of the ‘International Journal of Cultural Property’, an interdisciplinary journal on cultural heritage law and policy issues published by Cambridge University Press. |
| Christina Birdsall-Jones |
Curtin University - Australia |
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| John Carman |
Birmingham University - United Kingdom |
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John Carman is Birmingham University Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer in Heritage
Valuation. His research interests include how 'heritage' is given value and what kinds of
value are considered appropriate in what contexts, and a current concern is with notions
of property and how these relate to heritage issues. His authored books include "Valuing
Ancient Things" (1996), "Archaeology and Heritage" (2002) and "Against Cultural Property" (2005), and he has co-edited "Managing Archaeology" (1995), "World Heritage: global
challenges, local solutions " (2007) and "Heritage Studies: methods and approaches" (2009). |
| Maristella Casciato |
Docomo International / University of Bologna - Italy |
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| Gabriella Caterina |
University of Naples - Italy |
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Since 1980, Full Professor of Architectural Technology in the University
of Napoli Federico II, Faculty of Architecture.
Head of the Department of Architecture Technology and Design since 2002.
Is author of fundamental textbooks in the area of architecture technology
in the field of building recovery, essays and articles on building and
urban maintenance, re-qualification and reuse. |
| Sidney Cheung |
Chinese University of Hong Kong - China |
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Sidney C.H. Cheung received his anthropological training in Japan, and is
currently Professor and Chairperson of the Department of Anthropology as well
as Associate Director of the Centre for Cultural Heritage Studies. He has been
doing research about Ainu heritage in Japan, politics of heritage in Hong Kong,
and Chinese food heritage; his current rsearch on fishery heritage helps to
understand the fishermen perspectives on environmental change, sustainable
development and wetland conservation. |
| Isotta Cortesi |
University of Catania - Italy |
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Isotta Cortesi, Master in Architecture (University of Virginia, USA) and PhD in Urban Design (University of Florence), Fulbright Scholar and Fellow of the American Academy in Rome, currently teaches at the School of Architecture in Syracuse; has taught at the University of Genoa, Florence, Turin and University of Virginia (USA). Lecturer and visiting critic in different institutions is in the editorial committee of international architecture review. Her research interests include the bound between heritage and sustainable development in the contemporary global change conditions. |
| Giorgio Croci |
University of Rome "La Sapienza" - Italy |
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Graduated in Civil Engineering at “La Sapienza” University of Rome in May 1960. Since 1995 he has been full professor of the chair of “Structural problems of monuments and historical buildings” at the Faculty of Engineering of “La Sapienza” University of Rome.
From 1995 to 2005 he was Presidentof the “International Scientific Committee for Analysis and Restoration of Structures of Architectural Heritage” at the ICOMOS (International Council of Monuments and Sites). Under his chairmanship, the Committee wrote the international document entitled “Recommendations for the Analysis, Conservation and Structural Restoration of Architectural Heritage”. Since 1994 he has been member of the UNESCO standing committee for the preservation of the Temples of Angkor (Cambodia). Since 1996 he has been scientific coordinator of the research and projects for the restoration of the Colosseum. From 1998 until the completion of works (2003) he has been member of the Committee, appointed by the Italian Presidency of the Council, which designed the consolidation works for the Tower of Pisa. Since 1997 he has been member of the International study group for the preservation of Saint Sofia in Istanbul. In March 2000 he was awarded the Great silver Medal by the Académie d’Architecture in Paris as a personality who internationally contributed to the safeguard of architectural heritage in the world. Since 2005 he has been member of the UNESCO International Committee for the safeguard of cultural heritage of the Citadel of Jerusalem. He is a designer of the dismantling in Rome, the transportation and the re-installation (in Ethiopia) of the Axum Obelisk. |
| Peter Davis |
Newcastle University - United Kingdom |
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Peter Davis is Professor of Museology at the International Centre for Cultural and
Heritage Studies, Newcastle University and, from 2005 - 2009, Guest Professor of
Museology at Museion, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. His research interests include
the history of museums, the history of natural history and environmentalism, and
ecomuseums. He is the author of Museums and the Natural Environment (1996), Ecomuseums: a
sense of place (1999) and (with Christine Jackson) Sir William Jardine: a life in natural
history (2001). |
| Richard Field |
Saint Mary's University - Canada |
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Dr. Richard Field is an Adjunct Professor in the Atlantic Canada Studies Program at Saint
Mary's University, and a Research Associate at the Gorsebrook Research Institute. He is
currently preparing the manuscript "The Empire of Nature: Botanical Exploration in
Atlantic Canada, 1600-1850" for publication. In 2009, Dr. Field received the Faculty of
Arts Excellence in Teaching Award from the Saint Mary's Student Union Association. He
lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. |
| Annette B. Fromm |
Florida International University - United States of America |
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Dr. Annette B. Fromm is a folklorist and museum specialist. She serves as
Coordinator/Associate Professor of Museum Studies at Florida International University. She also serves as President of the International Committee of Museums of Ethnography
(ICME). Fromm is also a Sephardic scholar having published "We Are Few, Folklore and
Ethnic Identity of the Jewish Community of Ioannina, Greece" in 2008. |
| E. Wanda George |
Mount Saint Vincent University - Canada |
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| Amparo Graciani García |
University of Seville - Spain |
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Amparo Graciani, PhD in Art History, is professor of Construction History in the
University School of Technical Architecture (EUAT) at the University of Seville, where
she serves as the Sub-director of Teaching Innovation. Her fields of interest are
historical construction techniques (specially, pre-scientific period) and the analysis of
archaeological records as well as its involvement in building heritage applied to the
restoration and rehabilitation of historical constructions. She belongs to the Steering
Committee of the Spanish Society of Construction History (SEdHC), since its creation
(1997). She has also been a member of organising and scientific committees in many
congresses and a member of the editorial committees of some reviews such as "Arqueología
de la Arquitectura", CSIC, Spain and "OPUS, Quaderno di Storia, Architettura & Restauro",
Faculty of Achitecture, University of Chieti, Italy. |
| Andrew Hall |
Government of the Northern Cape
Province of South Africa - South Africa |
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Andrew Hall is the Senior Manager - Heritage in the Government of the Northern Cape
Province of South Africa and is a Vice President of ICOMOS. He holds an MS degree in
Historic Preservation from the University of Pennsylvania. |
| Myriam Jansen-Verbeke |
University of Leuveen - Belgium |
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| Roy Jones |
Curtin University - Australia |
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Roy Jones is Professor of Geography and Dean of Research and Graduate Studies in the
Faculty of Humanities at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Western Australia. He
is an historical geographer with research interests in tourism, heritage and planning. |
| June Komisar |
Ryerson University - Canada |
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June Komisar is an Associate Professor of Architecture at Ryerson
University. She has a PhD in the History and Theory of Architecture
and a professional degree in Architecture. Her research has focussed
on the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Ouro Preto, Brazil. She has
taught courses focussed on sustainable design, including "Designing
the Productive City" and a graduate level design studio called the
"Post Carbon Communities Studio". |
| Anna Leask |
Edinburgh Napier University - United Kingdom |
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Dr Anna Leask is Reader in Tourism in the School of Marketing, Tourism and Languages at Edinburgh Napier University. Her key research areas include managing tourism at UNESCO World Heritage Sites and the effective management of visitor attractions. She is co-editor of the textbooks Managing World Heritage Sites (2006) and Managing Visitor Attractions (2008). |
| Sérgio Lira |
University Fernando Pessoa - Portugal |
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Professor Sérgio Lira has a MPhil in Medieval History and is PhD in Museum Studies
(University of Leicester, UK). His present appointment is Associate Professor at
University Fernando Pessoa, where he teaches museum studies and cultural consumption as
main subjects. He as been the head researcher of several museum projects. He has also
been member of scientific committees in many international conferences and he is member
of the scientific and editorial committees of several Journals. He is member of the
Executive Board of Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development. |
| William Logan |
Deakin University - Australia |
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| Paulo Lourenço |
University of Minho - Portugal |
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Paulo Lourenço, professor, Department of Civil Engineering, University of
Minho, Guimarães, Portugal. He is experienced in the fields of NDT, advanced
experimental and numerical techniques, innovative strengthening techniques
and earthquake engineering. He is specialist in structural restoration, with
consultancy in several World Heritage sites. He is the Editor of the "Int.
J. of Architectural Heritage: Conservation, Analysis and Restoration",
Co-editor of the Conference Series "Structural Analysis of Historical
Constructions" and Coordinator of the European Erasmus Mundus Master Course
in "Structural Analysis of Monuments and Historical Constructions". |
| Alison McCleery |
Edinburgh Napier University - United Kingdom |
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Alison McCLeery is Professor of Social and Cultural Geography and also Director of Research at Edinburgh Napier University. Her specialist research focusses on the link between cultural identity and economic and social development on the North Atlantic rural periphery. |
| Alistair McCleery |
Edinburgh Napier University - United Kingdom |
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| Nabil Mohareb |
United Arab Emirates University - Unite Arab Emirates |
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| Keith Nurse |
University of West Indies - Barbados |
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Dr. Keith Nurse is Director of the Shridath Ramphal Centre for Internaional Trade Law, Policy and Services, University of the West Indies, Cavehill Campus, Barbados. His work has focused on the political economy and strategic business aspects of heritage embodied in festivals, carnivals, music and other forms of popular culture and cultural tourism. |
| Brian Osborne |
Queen's University / Carleton University - Canada |
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Professor Brian S. Osborne (Professor Emeritus, Queen's University;
Adjunct Research Professor, Carleton University) is currently researching the development
of local, regional, and national identities by examining symbolic landscapes,
monumentalism, performed commemoration, and tourism in an increasingly plural global
society with its trans-national linkages. |
| Susan Pearce |
University of Leicester - United Kingdom |
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| Theodore Prudon |
Columbia University - United States of America |
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| Claúdia Ramos |
University of Fernando Pessoa - Portugal |
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Professor Cláudia Ramos is PhD in Political Studies (University of Aberdeen) and has
MPhil in Medieval History. Her present appointment is Assistant Professor at the
Department of Political Science and Behaviour, University Fernando Pessoa. She has been
the working in international research projects on Political and European issues. |
| Greg Ringer |
Royal Roads University - Canada |
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Dr. Greg Ringer is an Associate Professor in the School of Tourism & Hospitality
Management, Royal Roads University (Canada), and an Adjunct Professor in International
Studies, University of Oregon (USA). He also serves as Visiting Professor at
universities in Montenegro and Vietnam, and as a sustainable tourism consultant to the
National Geographic Society, WWF, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, and the U.S. State
Department. Greg is the editor of DESTINATIONS: CULTURAL LANDSCAPES OF TOURISM, and the author of numerous book chapters and journal articles on protected area management and
heritage tourism in post-conflict countries in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America. He is also the recipient of three Fulbright awards to undertake research and lecture on
cultural and ecological heritage conservation in Uganda, Serbia-Montenegro, Thailand, and
Cambodia. |
| Paulo Castro Seixas |
University Fernando Pessoa - Portugal |
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Professor Paulo Seixas has a Masters is Sociology and a PhD in Social Anthropology. He is
Associate Professor at University Fernando Pessoa, and coordinator of the 1st and 2nd
degrees of the Cultural Studies Course (Anthropology). His research focus on cities and
globalization and, since the year of 2000, has been the head-researcher of the
PDTC/ANT/81065/2006 research project in East Timor, where PhD researcher from four
countries are working. He is the author of 7 books, and editor of 6 more, 2 of them on
East Timor |
| Pamela Sezgin |
Gainesville State College - United States of America |
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Dr. Pamela Dorn Sezgin is Associate Professor of Anthropology and History at Gainesville
State College, a unit of the University System of Georgia (U.S.A.). Dr. Sezgin served
as the executive director and curator of several small and medium-sized history and art
museums in Georgia and elsewhere in the Southern United States for 20 years before
returning to fulltime university teaching. She is currently developing a museum studies
program at her university. She served on the Scientific Committee for the Sharing
Cultures 2009 in Madelena, on Pico Island, the Azores. |
| Myra Shackley |
Nottingham Trent University - United Kingdom |
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| Yvette Staelens |
Bournemouth University - United Kingdom |
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Yvette Staelens is a Senior Lecturer and Programme leader of the MA Museum Studies
programme in the School of Conservation Sciences at Bournemouth University, Dorset,
England. She is a trained and experienced museum professional with research interests in
intangible cultural heritage and museums, and collected folk song. |
| Patricia Sterry |
University of Salford - United Kingdom |
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| David Throsby |
Macquarie University- Australia |
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David Throsby is Professor of Economics at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He has published extensively in the economics of art and culture. His work in the heritage area has focussed particularly on the economic and cultural valuation of heritage, the theory of cultural capital, and the role of heritage in sustainable development. His book “The “Economics of Cultural Policy” will be published this year by Cambridge University Press. |
| John Tunbridge |
Carleton University - Canada |
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John Tunbridge is Visiting Professor in Business Studies, University of Brighton, UK; and
Emeritus Professor of Geography and Environmental Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa,
Canada. His early background was in Geography at Cambridge, Bristol and Sheffield
Universities. During the course of his career he has taught at the Universities of New
England, Australia; Portsmouth, UK; and Natal/Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. He has
researched in the field of heritage for over 35 years, particularly with reference to its
tourism, waterfront and naval aspects, resulting in five books and many book chapters and
journal articles. |
| Geoffrey Wall |
University of Waterloo - Canada |
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Geoff Wall is Professor of Geography and Environmental Management at the University of Waterloo, Canada. He is a Past President of the International Academy for the Study of Tourism. His research is concerned with the impacts of tourism and the implications of these for planning. It examines the implications of tourism of different types for destinations with different characteristics. Much of his research has been undertalen in Asia, particularly China (including Taiwan) as well as Indonesia. |
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