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The White Horse Press

Introduction: Heritage at War – Plan and Prepare

  • Mark Dunkley(introduction by)
  • Anna Tulliach(introduction by)
  • Lisa Mol(introduction by)
Chapter of: Heritage at War: Plan and Prepare(pp. 1–24)
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TitleIntroduction: Heritage at War – Plan and Prepare
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/deed.en
CopyrightMark Dunkley, Anna Tulliach, Lisa Mol
PublisherThe White Horse Press
Published on2024-10-15
Page rangepp. 1–24
Print length24 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Media2 illustrations
Contributors

Mark Dunkley

(introduction by)
Visiting Fellow at Cranfield University
Fellow at Society of Antiquaries of London
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7873-5857

Mark Dunkley is a Visiting Fellow at Cranfield University, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and an Associate of the Security Institute. He is a Field Officer in the British Army Reserve where his interests encompass understanding the exploitation of cultural heritage across the spectrum of conflict. He has worked at the NATO CIMIC Centre of Excellence in The Hague and has deployed on resilience operations and contingency planning in support of civil authorities. He has published widely on the relationship between culture and warfare and is co-editor of Cultural Heritage in Modern Conflict (2023).

Anna Tulliach

(introduction by)
Research Fellow in Museum Studies at University of Leicester
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4993-7403

Dr Anna Tulliach is a Research Fellow in Museum Studies at the University of Leicester and an Associate Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. She has pub- lished extensively on the safekeeping of museum collections during conflict, art looting and vandalism in World War II, and the museological practices adopted between the two World Wars (1921–44). Her research interests include cultural property protection in wartime, art looting and vandalism in World War II and the military exploitation of cultural properties during conflict.

Lisa Mol

(introduction by)
Professor at University of the West of England
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5272-3671

Professor Lisa Mol is an expert in heritage stone deterioration, in particular deterioration associated with active combat, at the University of the West of England. She leads a wide range of funded projects, including ‘Heritage in the Crossfire’ and ‘Partnership for Heritage’, and supports initiatives and colleagues in conflict zones in the documentation and remediation of damage to built heritage. She teaches a variety of undergraduate and postgraduate courses in physical geography.

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Company registration 14549556

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