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H 290 x W 205 mm

266 pages

Colour figures throughout

Published Nov 2025

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Paperback: 9781805830382

Digital: 9781805830399

DOI 10.32028/9781805830382

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Keywords
Armed Conflict; Cultural heritage; Destruction; Media; Social Media; Propaganda; Protection

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Reporting Heritage Destruction

Edited by Bijan Rouhani, Timothy Clack, Bill Finlayson

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This volume from Oxford’s ECHGS Hub explores how heritage destruction is reported, its impacts, and ethical concerns. Covering Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, it ends with the ‘Oxford Recommendations’—a framework for responsible reporting on cultural heritage in conflict zones.

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Contents

List of Contributors

Introduction: Can Reporting Heritage Destruction Be a Double-Edged-Sword? – Bijan Rouhani, Bill Finlayson and Timothy Clack

 

SECTION I.  WHO OWNS AND VALUES CULTURAL HERITAGE?

Chapter 1. Heritage Without People: On the Search for New Forms of History Written by the People – Ammar Azzouz

Chapter 2. What Role for International Institutions in Promoting People-Led Heritage? – Elly Harrowell and Aparna Tandon

Chapter 3. The Perils of Endangerment: Reflections on Mapping Africa’s Endangered Archaeological Sites and Monuments – Paul J. Lane, Stefania Merlo, and the MAEASaM Project Team Members

Chapter 4. Intentional Heritage Destruction: Feminist Perspectives on Gender, Voice, and Norms – Eleanor Childs

Chapter 5. Underwater Cultural Heritage: A Weapon for Political Deception and Psychological Operations – Elena Perez-Alvaro

Chapter 6. The Role of Iraq’s Post-Conflict Legal Systems in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage: Protecting or Endangering? – Kristen Barrett-Casey

 

SECTION II. CULTURAL HERITAGE AS A HUMAN RIGHT

Chapter 7. A Human Rights Approach to the Protection of Cultural Heritage – Karima Bennoune

Chapter 8. Heritage and Genocide: The Role of Cultural Property Protection in the Prevention of Crimes Against Humanity – Jessica L. Wagner

Chapter 9. Rohingya Narratives Beyond Victimhood: Responses to Reporting on Heritage Destruction – Saqib Sheikh and Carolyn Morris

Chapter 10. Destructive Nostalgia: Whose Heritage? A Critical Review of Urbicide and the Politics of Cultural Erasure – Ashish Makanadar

Chapter 11. Reporting Heritage Destruction or Reclaiming the Collective Asset? An Experience of Shiraz – Mona Azarnoush

Chapter 12. From the Frontlines to the Headlines or Headlines to the Frontlines? Some Observations on the Implications of Media Reporting of the Destruction of Cultural Heritage in War – Timothy Clack

 

SECTION III. MEDIA REPORTING AND HERITAGE DESTRUCTION 

Chapter 13. Cultural Destruction as a Weapon of War – Sebastian Usher

Chapter 14. Sowing Salt and Cultivating Fear: Examining Patterns in Reporting Cultural Heritage Destruction from Ancient Times to the Digital Age – Bijan Rouhani

Chapter 15. State vs. Non-State Led Media: A Comparative Study of Reporting Cultural Heritage Destruction in Egypt – Mohamed W. Fareed

Chapter 16. Cultural Heritage in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988): The Unreported Legacy of a Protracted War – Bijan Rouhani and Bill Finlayson

Chapter 17. Cultural Heritage Intelligence and Human Security: Exercise HORIZON STRIKE – Mark Dunkley

Chapter 18. #Hashtaggingheritage: An Exploration of South Asian Social Media Landscapes and Heritage – Afifa Khan, Mou Sarmah, Vaneshree Vidyarthi, Rebecca Roberts and Cameron A. Petrie

Chapter 19. From Darkness to Dawn: Cultural Heritage Restoration in Tigray, Ethiopia’s Conflict Zone – Alula Tesfay Asfha

Chapter 20. Endangered Cultural Heritage in Northern Nigeria Amidst Terrorism: Myths, Mistakes, and Misunderstanding – Favour Chukwuemeka Uroko

Chapter 21. Heritage Destruction and its Preservation as a Legitimising Tool in The Russian Media – Thomas Richard

 

OXFORD RECOMMENDATIONS ON REPORTING HERITAGE DESTRUCTION

Oxford Recommendations on Reporting Heritage Destruction

About the Author

Dr Bijan Rouhani is a Researcher on the EAMENA Project at Oxford University.


Dr Bill Finlayson is Director of the EAMENA Project at Oxford University.


Dr Tim Clack is Associate Professor at the School of Archaeology an School of Anthropology at Oxford University.