TY - JOUR KW - Scale KW - UNESCO’s intangible cultural heritage KW - alpinism KW - category of practice KW - Heritage studies AU - Bernard Debarbieux AU - Herve Munz AB - For the last two decades, the polysemous notion of ‘scale’ has drawn an increasing amount of attention among scholars studying heritage policies and practices, often with regard to UNESCO conventions. Significantly, in many of these works, terms such as ‘global’, ‘national’ and ‘local’ are connected to categories of ‘scale’ or ‘level’ that are taken for granted by the scholars who use them to guide their analysis. This paper, in contrast, promotes a different, constructivist understanding of the notion of scale. From our perspective, there is an added value to be found in focusing—without using any preconceived or external conception of scale—on the ways in which stakeholders conceive of and use scale throughout the processes of heritage making. Using the case of alpinism and the creation of its file for submission to the Intangible Cultural Heritage list, we show that the interest of this approach lies in its comprehensive ability to highlight how people define, elaborate and use scale in order to qualify their practices or to achieve specific goals. DO - 10.1080/13527258.2019.1590445 M1 - 12 N1 - Publisher: Routledge N2 - For the last two decades, the polysemous notion of ‘scale’ has drawn an increasing amount of attention among scholars studying heritage policies and practices, often with regard to UNESCO conventions. Significantly, in many of these works, terms such as ‘global’, ‘national’ and ‘local’ are connected to categories of ‘scale’ or ‘level’ that are taken for granted by the scholars who use them to guide their analysis. This paper, in contrast, promotes a different, constructivist understanding of the notion of scale. From our perspective, there is an added value to be found in focusing—without using any preconceived or external conception of scale—on the ways in which stakeholders conceive of and use scale throughout the processes of heritage making. Using the case of alpinism and the creation of its file for submission to the Intangible Cultural Heritage list, we show that the interest of this approach lies in its comprehensive ability to highlight how people define, elaborate and use scale in order to qualify their practices or to achieve specific goals. SP - 1248 EP - 1262 TI - Scaling heritage. The construction of scales in the submission process of alpinism to UNESCO s intangible cultural heritage list UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85063465521&doi=10.1080%2f13527258.2019.1590445&partnerID=40&md5=47bd8924a866ab65f213f11067b0434d VL - 25 SN - 13527258 (ISSN) ER -