This collection discusses World Trade Law and focuses on the contested nature of World Heritage at sites as diverse as The Netherlands, Ellis Island, post-colonial Mesoamerica, Cambodia, Fiji, Kyrgyzstan and Vietnam. In addition, 8 research notes explore heritage interpretation in the USA, Lebanon, Peru, Indonesia, Singapore, Tasmania and India.This collection of papers discuss World Trade Law and focus on the contested nature of World Heritage at sites as diverse as The Netherlands, Ellis Island (USA), post-colonial Mesoamerica, Cambodia, Fiji, Kyrgyzstan, and Vietnam. In addition, eight research notes explore heritage interpretation in the USA, Lebanon, Peru, Indonesia, Singapore, Tasmania and India.David Harrison is a London educated Sociologist/Anthropologist who??has taught at the University of Sussex, London Metropolitan University, and The University of the South Pacific in Fiji, from which he retired in 2014.?? The USP link continues, and he is also associated with St. Mary's University College in London and the University of Surrey.??He has written extensively on tourism and development and has researched its impacts in Eastern Europe, Southern Africa, the Caribbean, the South Pacific and South-East Asia.Michael Hitchcock is Director of the International Institute of Culture Tourism and Development, London Metropolitan University.