Indigenous Rock Art Tourism in Australia: Contexts, Trajectories, and Multifaceted Realities

N. Cole, Lynley A. Wallis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper focuses on Australian Indigenous rock art tourism, a field that has received limited research attention. Our aim is to identify aspects which are invisible in tourism promotions. We note trends in rock art tourism and related research, survey the Australian situation, and employ a case study approach to outline the development of Indigenous rock art tourism in Kakadu National Park (KNP) and parts of the Quinkan (Laura Cooktown) region. In both regions, Aboriginal communities inherited legacies of top down decision-making and bureaucratic methods. Although the Laura people transitioned to a community-based system and a successful ranger program, they face challenges in achieving their aspirations for sustainable rock art tourism. KNP communities, subsumed into an unwieldy joint management arrangement for the World Heritage listed National Park, are faced with competing values and perspectives of the dominant government system. A centerpiece of the Balnggarrawarra tourism initiative is the ranger/tour guide system of the type which operated for some years at Laura and was introduced briefly at KNP. The model incorporates key elements of sustainable Indigenous tourism–traditional owner control and jobs, land care, conservation, cultural preservation, partnerships, and public education. Notwithstanding contemporary challenges and realities, a unifying theme is caring for rock art.
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澳大利亚的土著岩石艺术旅游:背景、轨迹和多方面的现实
本文关注的是澳大利亚土著岩石艺术旅游,这是一个研究有限的领域。我们的目的是找出旅游促销中不可见的方面。我们注意到岩石艺术旅游和相关研究的趋势,调查了澳大利亚的情况,并采用案例研究方法概述了卡卡杜国家公园(KNP)和部分昆坎(劳拉库克镇)地区土著岩石艺术旅游的发展。在这两个地区,土著社区继承了自上而下的决策和官僚主义方法的遗产。虽然劳拉人过渡到一个以社区为基础的系统和一个成功的护林员计划,但他们在实现可持续岩石艺术旅游的愿望方面面临着挑战。KNP社区被纳入列入世界遗产名录的国家公园的笨拙的联合管理安排中,面临着占主导地位的政府系统的竞争价值观和观点。Balnggarrawarra旅游计划的核心是护林员/导游系统,这种系统在Laura运行了几年,并在KNP进行了简要介绍。该模式结合了可持续土著旅游的关键要素——传统的所有者控制和就业、土地护理、保护、文化保护、伙伴关系和公共教育。尽管面临着当代的挑战和现实,但一个统一的主题是关心岩石艺术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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