Fiona Starr holds a PhD from the Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific, Deakin University, Australia. She has been Curator of Social History at Fairfield City Museum and Gallery in Sydney, and consultant to numerous heritage and museum exhibition and conservation projects, including the Qantas Founders Outback Museum, the Sydney Jewish Museum, the National Parks and Wildlife Service (NSW), the Melbourne Museum and the Historic Houses Trust of NSW.
This book examines the relationship between two divergent fields - corporate activity and heritage conservation - linking the financing of conservation and its benefits with the corporate social responsibility (CSR) goals of the private sector. Through discussion of physical conservation, benefits to heritage site visitors, sustainable development impacts, and corporate benefits such as improved reputation, this book outlines the shared value of corporate support for cultural heritage sites, and encourages financial and in-kind support for conservation and responsible activity by the private sector.
PART 1 1. Cultural Heritage Under Threat and Limited Conservation Resources 2. At the Intersection of Heritage and the Private Sector: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly 3. CSR and Conservation Goals: Where do They Intersect? Part 2 4. Shared Value of CSR for Heritage Conservation: American Express and the Case of Preah Khan, Angkor 5. The Shared Value Business Case for CSR Support for Cultural Heritage Conservation 6. Private Sector Heritage Partnerships: How to Engage and Create Shared Value 7. CSR and the Future of Conserving the Past