TY - JOUR KW - common land KW - Conservation KW - Cultural economy KW - cultural resources KW - Economics KW - Environment KW - environmental economics KW - heritage conservation KW - intangible heritage resource KW - natural resource KW - Natural resources KW - partnership approach KW - regulatory approach KW - Sustainability KW - Sustainable development KW - tangible heritage resource AU - Nancy Pollock-Ellwand AB - Heritage conservation and sustainable development share common ground that is not being fully explored by design and planning professionals. This paper examines how innovators in both fields are seeking that common ground by challenging divided approaches to natural and cultural conservation, environmental and economic processes and the treatment of tangible and intangible resources. These divisions are reinforced by traditional institutional and educational structures, as well as polarised worldviews. Creative practitioners in heritage conservation and sustainable development are exploring the potential of new partnerships, comprehensive policies and broader perspectives. These innovations potentially include everything from minor regulatory modifications to much less likely systemic structural shifts in governance and education. If successful, it could result in broader and more effective strategies, providing a shared frontier for both heritage conservation and sustainable development. BT - International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology DO - 10.1080/13504509.2011.576711 LA - English M1 - 3 N2 - Heritage conservation and sustainable development share common ground that is not being fully explored by design and planning professionals. This paper examines how innovators in both fields are seeking that common ground by challenging divided approaches to natural and cultural conservation, environmental and economic processes and the treatment of tangible and intangible resources. These divisions are reinforced by traditional institutional and educational structures, as well as polarised worldviews. Creative practitioners in heritage conservation and sustainable development are exploring the potential of new partnerships, comprehensive policies and broader perspectives. These innovations potentially include everything from minor regulatory modifications to much less likely systemic structural shifts in governance and education. If successful, it could result in broader and more effective strategies, providing a shared frontier for both heritage conservation and sustainable development. PY - 2011 SP - 236 EP - 242 T2 - International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology TI - Common ground and shared frontiers in heritage conservation and sustainable development: partnerships, policies and perspectives UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79958745816&doi=10.1080%2f13504509.2011.576711&partnerID=40&md5=4d736c732ab50aeb72657115c1d80161 VL - 18 SN - 13504509 (ISSN) ER -