@article{oai:tsukuba.repo.nii.ac.jp:00047841, author = {LEE, Emma}, journal = {世界遺産学研究, JOURNAL OF WORLD HERITAGE STUDIES}, month = {}, note = {In the 1980s Aboriginal Tasmanian heritage helped shape the declaration of the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area and clarified environmental powers of the Australian government. The rediscovery of sacred cave markings in the Southwest National Park was a focal point for both actions. Since then, in Tasmania, the influence of the sacred has waned. In 2016 a new plan of management for the Tasmanian Wilderness was designed to include Aboriginal Tasmanian inputs, which latterly resulted in the creation of a joint management framework to act as a new governance arrangement. The use of free, prior and informed consent conditions for Aboriginal engagement led to a re-awakening of the sacred in planning for a world heritage area, which in turn led to a collaborative process of designing joint management.}, pages = {42--46}, title = {Sacredness in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area}, volume = {SPECIAL ISSUE 2018}, year = {2018} }