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The influential cultural factor shaping experience design and creation in restricted areas: what archaeology tells visitors

In: Handbook of Experience Science

Author

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  • Hasan Ali Erdoğan

Abstract

Cultural/heritage tourism is on the increase globally. Almost 40% of all global tourism activities have somehow been associated with this tourism form. Archaeological heritage has been a critical component of its global development, affecting, manipulating, and revolutionizing the sector. Although everyone is the heir to archaeological heritage to some extent, the process of experiencing archaeological sites is unique in design. Therefore, this form of tourism may be unique regarding conservation and sustainability plans and hence protection of the sites from their owners. Visits to these areas are more controlled and limited by responsibility and obligation from individual, national, and international priorities. Therefore, shaping experience design and creation in these delicate, sensitive, and irreversible assets of humanity’s shared heritage is intricate, arduous, multidimensional, and vitally important.

Suggested Citation

  • Hasan Ali Erdoğan, 2024. "The influential cultural factor shaping experience design and creation in restricted areas: what archaeology tells visitors," Chapters, in: Joseph S. Chen & Nina K. Prebensen & Muzaffer S. Uysal (ed.), Handbook of Experience Science, chapter 10, pages 131-145, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:21746_10
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    File URL: https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781803926902.00017
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