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Featured Articles

January, 2008
GHF Mirador Featured in International Press

December, 2007
GHF Pingyao Featured in Architectural Digest

October, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in The New York Times

September, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in Daily Telegraph. Quote from Stefaan Poortman, Manager, International Development

December, 2006
Protecting Precious Places

December, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in National Geographic

January, 2006
Architecture: Monumental Task: Funding the Race Against Time

January, 2006
Preservation: Sure, It's a Good Thing, but..

More Articles

May, 2008
Saving One Heritage Site at a Time

March, 2008
Awesome Ancient Sites
Ruins not yet ruined by too many tourists

January, 2008
GHF Hampi Featured in The Times of India

November, 2007
Prince Charles visits Ancient Site in Anatolia to Commemorate new Site Museum and Visitors Center

Fall 2007
Saving the Mirador Basin. GHF featured in American Archaeology Magazine

July, 2007
Global Heritage Google Earth Outreach Launch

June, 2007
Site-seeing: Reports from the Field: Along the Nakbe Trail

April, 2007
Fire Alerts Go Global

February, 2007
GHF Mirador: Digging for the Truth "New Maya Revelations" to air on History Channel

January 7, 2007
Destination: Guatemala
Atop the world of the Maya

December 31, 2006
The mystery of Maya's jungle heart

December 15, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in Daily Mail

Nov, Dec 2006
The Mission for Mirador: Ecoconservationists are working to save Guatemala's wilderness, wildlife, and ruins

September 12, 2006
The United States Department of the Interior and the Government of Guatemala Sign Memorandum of Understanding to Protect Major Maya Archaeological Sites at El Mirador

August, 2006
A Home for the Indus - GHF's support of Indus Valley research, excavations and museums in Gujarat

August 18, 2006
Iraq's ancient gem - GHF mentioned in Arizona Daily Star article

July 4, 2006
Group guarding world's heritage

June 30, 2006
Indus Heritage Center Explores Ancient India Roots

June 17, 2006
Haunted By History - The ruins of a contested capital are still hostage to geopolitics

June, 17, 2006
The Ties That Divide - KARS: Locals dream of reopening the frontier between Turkey and Armenia

May, 2006
On Ancient Walls, a New Maya Epoch

March, 2006
Scanning Our Heritage. Laser Scanning For Cultural Heritage Applications. US Berkeley team scanning GHF Project, Chavín de Huántar

February 25, 2006
GHF Chavin de Huantar Featured on History Channel's 'Digging for the Truth'

February 10, 2006
Into The Wild - Searching The Jungle For Buried Mayan Treasure In Guatemala

January 25, 2006
$10m Museum to Re-Visit an Ancient Civilisation

January 17, 2006
Flip side of World Heritage status

December 24, 2005
GHF and Jindal Group to rebuild Hampi

December 20, 2005
GHF Founding Investor Bill Draper Featured in San Francisco Chronicle
Draper Fellowship Awarded to Global Heritage Fund in 2003

December 10, 2005
Running after fabulous ruins - Global Heritage Fund featured in The Hindu for work in Hampi UNESCO World Heritage site, Karnataka, India

November 25, 2005
GHF's Conservation in Shanxi Province Featured in Wall Street Journal - 'History's Last Salvation'

November, 2005
Global Heritage Fund Kars Heritage Program Featured on CNN Turkey

November 12, 2005
In Guatemala, A Battle Over Logs And a Lost Kingdom. Mr. Hansen Aims to Preserve Vast Mayan Ruin as Park; Skeptical, Villagers Fight

October 5 2005
Jeff Morgan's global approach to preservation could bring tourism, stability to postwar Iraq. Cornell University Chronicle Online article

October 2005
Return to Cyrene. GHF Funding Assists GIS Mapping of Cyrene

August 24, 2005
Kars wants to reopen its border on the Caucases

May 2005
Saving Our Global Heritage. GHF's CEO, Jeff Morgan, Featured in Gentry Magazine. (1.57 PDF)

April 28, 2005
Repairing Lost Monuments in Vietnam. GHF featured on ABC Vietnam special
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March 31, 2005
El Mirador Nominated as World Heritage Site. ElPeriodico article

March 31, 2005
El Mirador to be declared cultural heritage. Siglo article

April 18, 2005
Layers of clustered apartments hide artifacts of ancient urban life City on Turkish plains a major draw for 'goddess tours'

April, 2005
Set in Stone. Can Jeff Morgan save the world through enlightened tourism? (766k PDF)

April, 2005
Before It's Ruined: Northern Vietnam. You can lose the crowds at stunning My Son Sanctuary and Bach Ma National Park. (461k PDF)

March 30, 2005
Come and See. An increasing number of US and UK charities are organising donor field trips, which appeal to wealthy donors who want to see their cash in action rather than go to expensive fundraising diners. GHF featured in Third Sector article. (379k PDF)

Feb 11, 2005
How much difference does UNESCO make?

Jan/Feb 2005
Stone Temple Secrets. What happened in the underground labyrinth of ancient Peru? Archaeologist John Rick gets to the bottom of a 3,000-year-old mystery.

Oct 20 , 2004
From Ancient Ruins To Tourist Destinations

2005
Local man fights to protect cultural sites

"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
 
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Group guarding world's heritage
SITES MOST VULNERABLE TO POVERTY, WAR TOP LIST
The Mercury News Online

By Lisa M. Krieger
Mercury News - Tuesday, July 4th, 2006

Iraq Heritage Congress

Working in the desert outside Baghdad, a Palo-Alto-based conservancy group has learned that bullets and bombs are not the biggest threats to its plans to restore an ancient Mesopotamian city. Instead, workers must contend with looters, erosion and the encroachment of urban sprawl, agriculture and rising waters.

In heat that can climb as high as 120 degrees, and protected by armed guards, scientists funded by the Global Heritage Fund are identifying the threats to the 3,400-year-old city of Aqar Quf, believed to be the capital of the Kassite dynasty. Then they plan to work with Iraqis to save it.

“What people see on television are images of Hummers and helicopters, not the beauty,'' said Global Heritage Fund's Josie Thompson, who is working with Google Earth imagery to survey Iraqi sites. “It was a very advanced civilization, with sophisticated architectural elements. It was the Garden of Eden. . . . It needs to be saved.”

The fund's executive director, Jeff Morgan, a veteran of several high-tech start-ups and the venture capital world before turning to the preservation of ancient architecture, aims to take the non-profit fund where few other conservancy groups have gone: regions of the world most plagued by poverty and war.

Morgan and co-founder Ian Hodder, a Stanford University archaeologist, hope their “sustainable conservation” approach will fend off theft, destruction and the proliferation of McDonald's franchises from the ancient townscapes of developing countries, setting the stage for responsible local control and protection. Since its founding in 2001, the fund has worked around the world, from Latin America to Southeast Asia.

“In 10 years, tourism will be the No. 2 industry in Iraq, after oil,” predicts Morgan, whose organization has won the support of some of the United States' leading academicians, foundations and private donors. Morgan's optimism, energy and intellectual firepower have helped boost the fund's annual contributions from $302,200 in 2002 to $2.85 million in 2005 -- and attracted millions in matching funds. The group will generate more spending on global preservation this year than the UNESCO World Heritage Fund.

Morgan and his small staff bring modern technologies to the field of ancient heritage conservation. Thompson, for instance, has developed a Web-based network that gives teams around the world access to communication tools, software and other data using Google Earth and other tools. Equally important, they connect with a region's residents, academics and private corporations, so they feel more invested in the preservation effort. “We ask them: What site best represents your country?” Morgan said.

Once a site is protected, tourism can help sustain the local economy and even promote political stability, he hopes. Former World Bank Vice President Johannes F. Linn, who serves on their board of trustees, calls the fund “unique in its focus on globally significant cultural heritage sites in developing countries.” University of Wisconsin anthropology professor J. Mark Kenoyer, who is working with the fund to build a museum and research center on the Indus civilization in Pakistan and India, says the organization has “improved both local and global awareness of the importance of our common global cultural heritage.” But the fund is in a race against time.

In southern Iraq, for instance, dozens of ancient sites are pockmarked by excavation and theft -- not bombs. “When you rip up archaeology, it's gone forever,” he said. “You can't bring it back.” The fund's challenge is to identify the most vulnerable and important remaining sites as soon as possible. Every project shares the same goals: Involve the community. Create an appropriate plan. Then pay for the work. Once a site is conserved, the fund seeks an official UNESCO designation for the site. This serves as a magnet for international cooperation, public awareness and possible U.N. funding. Finally, the fund appoints a local board of directors to oversee the future of the project. “Once there's momentum, it can be kept going,” Morgan said. The Cornell-educated Morgan, 43, learned to marry entrepreneurial zeal and public service from his father, Jim Morgan, the former chairman and chief executive of Applied Materials, and his mother, former State Senator Becky Morgan.

The fund's sites range from the My Son Sanctuary in Vietnam to the giant Mirador Basin of Guatemala -- a remote and pristine jungle expanse, rich with ruins yet threatened by encroaching slash-and-burn practices. As part of its efforts to sustain the Mirador Basin, the fund provided a visitors center, camps, satellite phones, water and training for professional tours in a nearby village. Natives paint murals or weave rugs at visitor centers.

“It's like venture capital,” he said. “You find the right leaders. You test them for their honesty and capabilities. Then, if they're great, you put a lot of money behind them.” The fund's goal of sustainability is shared by others. “I am enthusiastic about all the areas that GHF is working in,'' said Duncan Beardsley, director of the Oakland-based non-profit group Generosity in Action, which links travelers to projects in developing countries. ``Tourism can become an effective economic engine.”

“Even within the poorest country, in the poorest condition, archaeology provides hope for the local economy,” Morgan said.

GLOBAL HERITAGE FUND PROJECTS In the next decade, GHF hopes to conserve and develop these sites while building a worldwide network of hundreds of experts to advise on preservation issues. The group also plans to deliver $30 million in private funding to support field work.

Please direct media inquiries to:
GHF Press press@globalheritagefund.org or (650) 325 7520

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