This is a very interesting development. I visited the Liverpool Maritime Museum back in 2002 and was impressed with the Slavery Gallery. I also went on a less publicized walking tour organized by E.S. Lynch, which covered architectural and iconographic aspects of Liverpool's history in relation to the slave trade. I was hoping to find similar attention to local slave trade history and opportunities to learn about it through museum visitation and tourism when I visited Bristol, but unfortunately found there to be considerably less available (or perhaps I wasn't looking in the right spaces). Best, Ann Quoting Philip Stone <[log in to unmask]>: > Hi... > > On behalf on Dr John Beech, please find attached... > > Cheers > PHIL > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Philip Stone > Senior Lecturer / Course Leader > (Editor - The Dark Tourism Forum) > > 'Death, Disaster and the Macabre - Discover more about the 'darker side > of tourism' by visiting The Dark Tourism Forum at > www.dark-tourism.org.uk > > Recent Publication(s) > Stone, P.R (2005) "Consuming Dark Tourism - a call for research" > eReview of Tourism Research, Vol 3(5), p.109-117. Available Full Text: > http://ertr.tamu.edu/appliedresearch.cfm?articleid=90 > > Stone, P.R (2005) "Dark Tourism - an old concept in a new world" > Tourism, The Tourism Society, Quarter IV, Issue 125, p.20 > > > University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) > Lancashire Business School > Department of Tourism & Leisure Management > PRESTON > PR1 2HE > UK > > Room: Greenbank 130 > Tel: (+44) 01772 894 769 > Fax: (+44) 01772 892 927 > Email: [log in to unmask] > Profile: www.philipstone.me.uk > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >