This paper explores issues relating to multiple and changing values and uses of desert landscapes in the context of tourism at Ulur{line below}u-Kata Tju{line below}ta National Park (UKTNP), co-managed by Aboriginal people and the Australian Government agency Parks Australia. More than 400,000 people visit the park each year, drawn mostly by the massive red monolith. To the local Aboriginal people, A{line below}nangu, this rock is Ulur{line below}u, a complex of places with great spiritual importance. Since co-management, UKTNP has become a symbol of the reconciliation process between Aboriginal and settler Australians. Climbing the rock is a popular activity. Aboriginal co-managers ask visitors not to climb Ulur{line below}u but rather to ...
This paper focuses on Australian Indigenous rock art tourism, a field that has received limited rese...
Previous studies of recreation conflicts in protected areas focus on conflicts between visitors and ...
In the management of protected areas, stakeholders range from supra-national organisations, through ...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia's Northern Territory continues to be a contested site, a...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is one of Australia's most high-profile tourist destinations. Each ye...
For years climbing the rock was considered a highlight of a trip to the Centre. It's important to no...
This paper examines how tourists justify inappropriate behaviour at contested cultural heritage site...
This article focuses on management in the culture of a unique community, that is, the indigenous peo...
Uluru is an Australian ‘icon’, an impressively huge red boulder located centrally in the arid contin...
Each day the joint managers of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park receive packages of returned rocks and...
The numbers of tourists visiting indigenous heritage sites is increasing. This has resulted in confl...
By comparing the climbing controversies at Uluru and the Devils Tower, this paper seeks to examine h...
This paper examines how Indigenous cultures and their connections to country are presented to the pu...
Management of the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia - a contribution to the research of Ab...
The decision to cease the climbing of one of Australia’s major tourist attractions, the UNESCO World...
This paper focuses on Australian Indigenous rock art tourism, a field that has received limited rese...
Previous studies of recreation conflicts in protected areas focus on conflicts between visitors and ...
In the management of protected areas, stakeholders range from supra-national organisations, through ...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia's Northern Territory continues to be a contested site, a...
Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park is one of Australia's most high-profile tourist destinations. Each ye...
For years climbing the rock was considered a highlight of a trip to the Centre. It's important to no...
This paper examines how tourists justify inappropriate behaviour at contested cultural heritage site...
This article focuses on management in the culture of a unique community, that is, the indigenous peo...
Uluru is an Australian ‘icon’, an impressively huge red boulder located centrally in the arid contin...
Each day the joint managers of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park receive packages of returned rocks and...
The numbers of tourists visiting indigenous heritage sites is increasing. This has resulted in confl...
By comparing the climbing controversies at Uluru and the Devils Tower, this paper seeks to examine h...
This paper examines how Indigenous cultures and their connections to country are presented to the pu...
Management of the Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia - a contribution to the research of Ab...
The decision to cease the climbing of one of Australia’s major tourist attractions, the UNESCO World...
This paper focuses on Australian Indigenous rock art tourism, a field that has received limited rese...
Previous studies of recreation conflicts in protected areas focus on conflicts between visitors and ...
In the management of protected areas, stakeholders range from supra-national organisations, through ...