HERITAGE TOURISM

Azarya, Victor.
“Globalization and international tourism in developing countries: Marginality as a commercial commodity.” Current Sociology 52.6 (2004): 949-967.

Baderoon, G.
The African Oceans—Tracing the Sea as Memory of Slavery in South African Literature and Culture. Research in African Literatures 40(4), 89-107. Indiana University Press. Retrieved October 30, 2013, from Project MUSE database, 2009.

Bickford-Smith, Vivian.
“Creating a City of the Tourist Imagination: The Case of Cape Town, The Fairest Cape of Them All’.” Urban Studies 46.9 (2009): 1763-1785.

Boshoff, J., et al.
A Proposal for the Establishment of a Tourist Shipwreck Route. Cape Town, South Africa: National Monuments Council, 1994.

Burman, Jose.
The Bay of Storms: Table Bay, 1503-1860. Human and Rousseau, Cape Town, 1976.

Demhardt, Imre Josef.
“Wine and Tourism at the “Fairest Cape” Post-Apartheid Trends in the Western Cape Province and Stellenbosch (South Africa).” Journal of Travel & Tourism Marketing 14.3-4 (2003): 113-130.

Dobson, J.
“Shark! A new frontier in tourist demand for marine wildlife.” Marine wildlife and tourism management. Insights from the natural and social sciences (2008): 49-65.

Duffy, Rosaleen, and Lorraine Moore.
“Neoliberalising Nature? Elephant‐Back Tourism in Thailand and Botswana.” Antipode 42.3 (2010): 742-766.

George, Richard.
“Tourist’s perceptions of safety and security while visiting Cape Town.” Tourism Management 24.5 (2003): 575-585.

Goudie, S. C., F. Khan, and D. Kilian.
“Transforming tourism: black empowerment, heritage and identity beyond apartheid.” South African Geographical Journal 81.1 (1999): 22-31.

Hall, Martin.
Identity, Memory and Countermemory: The Archaeology of an Urban Landscape,” Journal of Material Culture, Vol. 11, No. 1-2, (2006), 189-209.

Hall, C. Michael.
“Trends in ocean and coastal tourism: the end of the last frontier?.” Ocean & Coastal Management 44.9 (2001): 601-618.

Hall, Colin Michael, ed.
Pro-poor tourism: who benefits? Perspectives on tourism and poverty reduction. Vol. 3. Channel View Publications, 2007.

Halkett, D.
“An initial assessment of engravings on calcrete ridges at Bordjiesrif, Cape Point Nature Reserve.” Unpublished report prepared for Cape Peninsula National Park. Archaeology Contracts Office, University of Cape Town (2002).

Harris, Lynn
Chapter 9. “Maritime Heritage Outreach and Education: East Carolina University’s Engagement with International Public Communities in Africa and the Caribbean”

in Between the Devil and the Deep: Meeting Challenges in the Public Perception of Maritime Cultural Heritage, Della Scott-Ireton (ed.), Springer Press, 2013.

Johnson, R., and A. Kock
“South Africa’s White Shark cage-diving industry-is their cause for concern.” Finding a balance: White shark conservation and recreational safety in the inshore waters of Cape Town, South Africa (2006): 3.

Kotze, Nico.
“Cape Town and the Two Oceans Marathon: The impact of sport tourism.” Urban Forum. Vol. 17. No. 3. Springer Netherlands, 2006.

Malan, Antonio
[with C. Soudien]  ‘Managing heritage in District Six: conflicts past and present.’  In J. Schofield (ed.), The Archaeology of Twentieth Century Conflict.  London: Routledge,2002.

[with E. van Heyningen] ‘Twice Removed: Horstley Street in Cape Town’s District Six, 1865-1982.’ In A. Mayne & T. Murray (eds), The Archaeology of Urban Landscapes: Explorations in Slumland, p. 39-56.  Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,2001..

[with J. Klose] ‘The ceramic signature of the Cape in the nineteenth century, with particular reference to the Tennant Street site, Cape Town.’ The South African Archaeological Bulletin 55(171): 49-59,2000.

‘Chattels or Colonists? ‘Freeblack’ women and their households.’ Kronos 25:50-71, 198/1999.

McDonald, David A.
World city syndrome: Neoliberalism and inequality in Cape Town. Routledge, 2008.

Meskell, Lynn, and Lindsay Weiss.
“Coetzee on South Africa’s past: Remembering in the time of forgetting.” American anthropologist 108.1 (2006): 88-99.

Phaswana-Mafuya, Nancy, and Norbert Haydam.
“Tourists’ expectations and perceptions of the Robben Island Museum—a world heritage site.” Museum Management and Curatorship 20.2 (2005): 149-169.

Pirie, Gordon.
“Urban tourism in Cape Town.” Urban Tourism in the developing world: The South African experience (2007): 307-325.

Rediker, Marcus.
“History from below the water line: Sharks and the Atlantic slave trade.” Atlantic Studies 5.2 (2008): 285-297.

Sadler, Nigel
The Trouvadore Project: The Search for a Slave Ship and its Cultural Importance. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology (2008)12:53-70.

Shackley, Myra.
“Potential Futures for Robben Island: shrine, museum or theme park?” International Journal of Heritage Studies 7.4 (2001): 355-363.

Smith, Tim
“Shipwreck Trails: Public Ownership of a Unique Resource?.” Submerged Cultural Resource Management. Springer Us, 2003. 121-133.

Souter, Corioli
“Cultural tourism and diver education.” Maritime Archaeology. Springer US, 2006. 163-176.

Strange, Carolyn, and Michael Kempa
“Shades of dark tourism: Alcatraz and Robben Island.” Annals of Tourism Research 30.2 (2003): 386-405.

Staniforth, Mark
“Assessing the significance of 20th century underwater cultural heritage.” (2002).

Theroux, Paul
The Last Train to Zona Verde: My Ultimate African Safari. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013.

Turner, Malcolm
Shipwrecks and Salvage in South Africa. Struik Publishers, 1999

Van Herwerden, L., et al.
“Patterns of shore utilization in a metropolitan area: the Cape Peninsula, South Africa.” Ocean and Shoreline Management 12.4 (1989): 331-346.

Visser, Gustav
“The developmental impacts of backpacker tourism in South Africa.” GeoJournal 60.3 (2004): 283-299.

Visser, Gustav
“Gay men, tourism and urban space: Reflections on Africa’s’ gay capital’.” Tourism Geographies 5.2 (2003): 168-189.