Publications
Books
Pocock, Celmara (2020). Visitor encounters with the Great Barrier Reef: aesthetics, heritage and the senses. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis. doi: 10.4324/9781315169316
Pocock, Celmara, Stell, Marion, Frost, Lucy, Crozier, Julia and Ancher, Simon (2010). Living memory and the interpretation of heritage: Developing a multimedia interactive to record and store personal stories for use in heritage interpretation and research. Gold Coast, Qld., Australia: CRC Sustainable Tourism.
Carlsen, Jack, Hughes, Michael, Frost, Warwick, Pocock, Celmara and Peel, Vicki (2008). Success factors in cultural heritage tourism enterprise management. Gold Coast, QLD, Australia.: Sustainable Tourism CRC.
Stell, Marion, Pocock, Celmara and Ballantyne, Roy (2007). Essential Australia: Towards a thematic framework for the interpretation of cultural heritage sites in tourism. Gold Coast: Sustainable Tourism Cooperative Research Centre.
Book Chapters
Schofield, John and Pocock, Celmara (2023). Plasticity and time: using the stress-strain curve as a framework for investigating the wicked problems of marine pollution and climate change. Toxic Heritage. (pp. 62-73) edited by Elizabeth Kryder-Reid and Sarah May. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781003365259-7
Pocock, Celmara (2023). Visualising heritage landscapes in future. Routledge handbook of cultural landscape practice. (pp. 431-441) edited by Steve Brown and Cari Goetcheus. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781315203119-52
Pocock, Celmara, Stell, Marion and Mate, Geraldine (2018). Raw emotion: The Living Memory module at three sites of practice. Emotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the Present. (pp. 281-303) edited by Laurajane Smith, Margaret Wetherell and Gary Campbell. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781351250962-17
Pocock, Celmara (2017). Reading indigeneity without race: colour, representation and uncertainty in photographic evidence. Archaeologies of ‘Us’ and ‘Them’: debating the ethics and politics of ethnicity and indigeneity in archaeology and heritage discourse. (pp. 140-158) edited by Charlotta Hillerdal, Anna Karlstrom Angerth and Carl-Gösta Ojala. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge/Taylor & Francis. doi: 10.4324/9781315641997
Pocock, Celmara (2013). Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority: national parks, changes in perception, and hyper-reality. Crown jewels: five great national parks around the world and the challenges they face. (pp. 118-135) edited by Randolph Delehanty. Washington, United States: American Association of Museums.
Pocock, Celmara (2009). Entwined histories: Photography and tourism on the Great Barrier Reef. The framed world: Tourism, tourists and photography. (pp. 185-197) edited by Mike Robinson and David Picard. Farnham, Surrey, UK: Ashgate Publishing.
Pocock, Celmara (2008). Reaching for the Reef: Exploring place through touch. Making Sense of Place: Exploring concepts and expressions of place through different senses and lenses. (pp. 76-85) edited by Frank Vanclay, Matthew Higgins and Adam Blackshaw. Canberra, Australia: National Museum of Australia Press.
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Sensing Place, Consuming Space: Changing Visitor Experiences of the Great Barrier Reef. Tourism, Consumption and Representation: Narratives of Place and Self. (pp. 94-112) edited by Kevin Meethan, Alison Anderson and Steve Miles. Abingdon, Oxfordshire United Kingdom: CABI Publishers.
Pocock, Celmara (2004). Real to Reel Reef: space, place and film on the Great Barrier Reef. Placing the moving image. (pp. xx-xx) edited by Ferrero-Regis, Tiziana and Moran, Albert. Nathan, Qld: Griffith University.
Pocock, Celmara (2002). Identifying social values in archival sources: Change, continuity and invention in tourist experiences of the Great Barrier Reef. The changing coast. (pp. 281-290) edited by Veloso Gomes, Pinto Taveira and Luciana das Neves. Porto, Portugal: Eurocoast/EUCC.
Journal Articles
Pocock, Celmara, Collett, David and Knowles, Joan (2024). False Promise: World Heritage, Ecotourism, and the Local Community of Strahan, Tasmania. Heritage, 7 (2), 1028-1042. doi: 10.3390/heritage7020050
Riddle, Stewart, Hickey, Andrew, Pocock, Celmara, McKee, Alarnah, Skye, Danika and Wallis, Rachael (2024). Moving beyond deficit media figurations of young people: troubling the contemporary ‘youth crime crisis’. Continuum, 37 (6), 1-14. doi: 10.1080/10304312.2024.2313565
Henry, Rosita, Ramoutsaki, Helen, Long, Debbi, Acciaioli, Greg, Foale, Simon, Pocock, Celmara, McBain-Rigg, Kristin and Wood, Michael (2023). Weedy life: coloniality, decoloniality, and tropicality. eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the Tropics, 22 (1), 236-269. doi: 10.25120/etropic.22.1.2023.3985
Blanchard, Christine, Harris, Peter, Pocock, Celmara and McCabe, Bernadette K. (2023). Food and garden organic waste management in Australia: co-benefits for regional communities and local government. Sustainability, 15 (13) 9901. doi: 10.3390/su15139901
Pocock, Celmara, Collett, David and Knowles, Joan (2022). World heritage as authentic fake: paradisic reef and wild Tasmania. Landscape Research, 47 (8), 1-15. doi: 10.1080/01426397.2022.2115990
Collett, David, Knowles, Joan and Pocock, Celmara (2022). Custom, conflict and the construction of heritage: European huts on the Tasmanian Central Plateau. Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage, 10 (1), 3-23. doi: 10.1080/20518196.2022.2080905
Pocock, Celmara (2021). Great Barrier Reef World Heritage: nature in danger. Queensland Review, 28 (2), 118-129. doi: 10.1017/qre.2022.8
Stell, Marion and Pocock, Celmara (2019). In community hands: memory and the material culture legacy of a mega sporting event: commemorating the 1982 XII Commonwealth games in Brisbane. The International Journal of the History of Sport, 36 (6), 1-19. doi: 10.1080/09523367.2019.1647170
Palmer, Jane and Pocock, Celmara (2019). Aboriginal colonial history and the (un)happy object of reconciliation. Cultural Studies, 34 (1), 1-21. doi: 10.1080/09502386.2019.1602153
Stell, Marion, Mate, Geraldine and Pocock, Celmara (2018). Better ways of seeing landscapes: the Queensland Historical Atlas. Queensland Review, 25 (2), 267-285. doi: 10.1017/qre.2018.25
Pocock, Celmara and Jones, Siân (2018). Contesting the center. Heritage and Society, 10 (2), 99-108. doi: 10.1080/2159032x.2018.1457301
Pocock, Celmara and Lilley, Ian (2018). Who benefits? World Heritage and indigenous people. Heritage and Society, 10 (2), 171-190. doi: 10.1080/2159032X.2018.1503836
Mate, Geraldine and Pocock, Celmara (2017). A disconnected journey. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 24 (4), 374-389. doi: 10.1080/13527258.2017.1378902
Palmer, Jane, Pocock, Celmara and Burton, Lorelle (2017). Waiting, power and time in ethnographic and community-based research. Qualitative Research, 18 (4), 146879411772841-432. doi: 10.1177/1468794117728413
Pocock, Celmara (2015). Nostalgia and belonging: Henry George Lamond writing the Whitsunday Islands. Queensland Review, 22 (1), 49-61. doi: 10.1017/qre.2015.5
Pocock, Celmara , Collett, David and Baulch, Linda (2015). Assessing stories before sites: identifying the tangible from the intangible. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 21 (10), 962-982. doi: 10.1080/13527258.2015.1040440
Picard, David, Pocock, Celmara and Trigger, David (2014). Tourism as theatre: performing and consuming indigeneity in an Australian wildlife sanctuary. Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change, 12 (3), 206-223. doi: 10.1080/14766825.2014.933967
Pocock, Celmara (2014). Aborigines, Islanders and hula girls in Great Barrier Reef tourism. The Journal of Pacific History, 49 (2), 170-192. doi: 10.1080/00223344.2014.897201
Pocock, Celmara (2010). Islands. Queensland Historical Atlas: Histories, Cultures, Landscapes, 2009-10.
Pocock, Celmara (2010). Survival: how the landscape impacts on people. Queensland Historical Atlas: Histories, Cultures, Landscapes, 2009-2010.
Pocock, Celmara (2010). Fight for liberty and freedom: The origins of Australian Aboriginal activism . By John Maynard. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 56 (3), 472-474. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8497.2010.01566.x
Pocock, Celmara (2010). Aborigines and Activism: Race, Aborigines and the Coming of the Sixties to Australia[By Jennifer Clark (Perth: University of Western Australia Press, 2008), A$39.95 (pb)].. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 56 (3), 472-474. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8497.2010.01566.x
Pocock, Celmara (2010). A playground for science: Great Barrier Reef. Queensland Historical Atlas: Histories, Cultures, Landscapes, 2009-2010.
Pocock, Celmara (2010). Visiting the Great Barrier Reef. Queensland Historical Atlas: Histories, Cultures, Landscapes, 2009-2010.
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Tourists riding turtles. Australian Zoologist, 33 (4), 425-435. doi: 10.7882/az.2006.015
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Object Lessons: Archaeology & Heritage in Australia. Australian Archaeology, 63, 65-67.
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Authenticity in Cultural Heritage Management and Tourism. Historic Environment, 19 (2), 3-8.
Pocock, Celmara (2006). No D-Generation. Southern Review: Communication, Politics and Culture, 38 (2), 124-126.
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Turtle riding on the Great Barrier Reef. Society and Animals, 14 (2), 129-146. doi: 10.1163/156853006776778789
Mulcock, Jane, Pocock, Celmara and Toussaint, Yann (2005). Introduction: Current Directions in Australian Anthropologies of the Environment. Australian Journal of Anthropology, 16 (3), 281-293. doi: 10.1111/j.1835-9310.2005.tb00311.x
Pocock, Celmara (2005). 'Blue lagoons and coconut palms': the creation of a tropical idyll in Australia. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 16 (3), 335-349. doi: 10.1111/j.1835-9310.2005.tb00315.x
Pocock, Celmara (2002). Sense Matters: aesthetic values of the Great Barrier Reef. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 8 (4), 365-381. doi: 10.1080/1352725022000037191
Conference Papers
Pocock, Celmara, Collett, David and Baulch, Linda (2013). Assessing stories before sites: identifying the tangible from the intangible. Sharing Cultures 2013: 3rd International Conference on Intangible Cultural Heritage, Aveiro, Portugal, 24-26 July 2013. Barcelos, Portugal: Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development.
Pocock, C., Hughes, M., Carlsen, J., Peel, V. and Frost, W. (2007). Key Success Factors and Information Availability in Cultural Heritage Tourism Operations. CAUTHE 2007 : Tourism - Past Achievements, Future Challenges, Sydney, Australia, 11-14 February, 2007. Sydney, Australia: University of Technology Sydney.
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Authenticity in cultural heritage management and tourism. Australia ICOMOS 2004 National Conference: Loving it to Death, Port Arthur, Tas., Australia, 25-28 November 2004. Carlton, Vic., Australia: Australia ICOMOS.
Generic Document
Pocock, Celmara (2006). Bibliography of Tasmanian Travel. UTAS.
Department Technical Reports
Stell, Marion K. and Pocock, Celmara (2007). The End Crowns the Labour: Interpretation at Brickendon, Tasmania. CRC for Sustainable Tourism.
Pocock, Celmara (2007). Towards a cultural heritage tourism research strategy: developing synergies in Australian heritage and tourism research. 2. Research Informing Policy and Planning, Gold Coast Campus. Griffith University. QLD.