The Yearbook of Transnational History is dedicated to disseminating pioneering research in the field of transnational history. This sixth volume investigates the treatment of tangible and intangible heritage sites created before the advent of nation states and in spaces that are not under the control of nation states. Chapters discuss the appropriation of heritage sites that originated in the era of the Crusades by modern nation states, the lack of national appropriation in the case of transnational sealing sites in Antarctica, the process of recognizing transnational heritage sites in the case of assembly halls created by the transnational labor movement, and the treatment of potential heritage sites in outer space.
Heritage Without National Boundaries Barry L. Stiefel and Shelley-Anne Peleg
Crossing Borders with Crusader Heritage Shelley-Ann Peleg
YU-NESCO: The Role of World Heritage in Making and Breaking Boundaries in Yugoslavia and its Successor States: Croatia, Montenegro, and North Macedonia Josef Djordjevski
The Labor Movement as UNESCO World Heritage: Claiming a Seat for Workers Through Assembly Halls Marie Brøndgaard
Approaching Balkan Dark/Dissonant Cultural Heritage Places through Visual Arts: The Case of the ECHO Project Nikos Pasamitros
The Champlain Quadricentennial: Celebrating 400 years of….? Anastasia L. Pratt
Fugitives No More: A Multinational Comparative Study of Maroon Heritage Preservation Barry L. Stiefel
Rediscovering the Roots that Remained Abroad: Challenges and Methods in Teaching Transborder Genealogy Izabella Parowicz
Stateless Heritage: The Sealing Sites of the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica Michael Pearson and Melisa A. Salerno
Aerospatial Heritage Sites: A Borderless, Transnational Heritage of Valued, Meaningful Sites at Altitude Ryan N. Sisak