01727nas a2200145 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002260002300043100001400066245005800080856014900138300001200287520123500299020004701534 2016 d bTaylor and Francis1 aD. Henson00aFinding people in the heritage of bankside, southwark uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85087263701&doi=10.4324%2f9781315547251-18&partnerID=40&md5=8baba959c090ce41b187ed824fd5b86c a147-1643 aHeritage is a very loaded word. It covers all manner of things, which is why there is a common distinction between natural and cultural heritage, and between tangible and intangible heritage. These categories reflect legal international definitions of heritage. UNESCO defines tangible cultural heritage as monuments, groups of buildings or sites that are valued for historical, artistic, scientific, aesthetic, ethnological or anthropological reasons (UNESCO 1972). Heritage is also a category of cultural asset, subject in the United Kingdom to a process of creation and curation by various organisations. In England, archaeological heritage is treated by government at one remove through the agency of English Heritage. Heritage objects such as monuments, buildings or sites are designated or listed according to set criteria. Scheduled monuments in England should be of national importance and may be a rare or representative example of their type, vulnerable to destruction or erosion, or have the potential to contribute to future knowledge (Department for Culture Media and Sport 2010a). English listed buildings should be rare, of aesthetic merit, distinctive or significant (Department for Culture Media and Sport 2010b). a9781134764778 (ISBN); 9781409439349 (ISBN)