1. Remembering places of pain and shame, William S. Logan and Keir Reeves 2. Let the dead be remembered: interpretation of the Nanjing Massacre memorial, Qian Fengqi 3. The Hiroshima "Peace Memorial": Transforming Legacy, memories and landscapes, Yushi Utaka 4. Auschwitz-Birkenau: The challenges of heritage management following the cold war, Katie Young 5. "Dig a hole and bury the past in it": Reconciliation and the heritage of genocide in Cambodia, Colin Long and Keir Reeves 6. The Myall Creek Memorial: History, Identity and reconciliation, Bronwyn Batten 7. Cowra Japanese War Cemetry, Ali Kobayashi and Bart Ziino 8. A cave in Taiwan: comfort women's memories and the local identity, Chou Ching-yuan 9. Postcolonial shame: heritage and the forgotten pain of civilian women inernees in Java, Joost Cote 10. Difficult memories: the independence struggle as cultural heritage in East Timor, Michael Leach 11. Port Arthur, Norfolk Island, New Caledonia: convict prison islands in the antipodes, Jane Lennon 12. Hoa Lo Museum, Hanoi: changing attutudes to a Vietnamese place of pain and shame, William S. Logan 13. Places of Pain as tools for social justice in the "new" South Africa: black heritage preservation in the "rainbow" nation's townships, Angel David Nieves 14. Negotiating places of pain in post-conflict Northern Ireland: Debating the future of the maze/prison/Long Kesh, Sara McDowell 15. Beauty Springing from the breast of pain, Spencer Leineweber 16. "No less than a palace: Kew asylum, its planned surrounds, and its present-day residents, Keir Reeves and David Nichols 17. Between the hostel and the detention centre: possible trajectories of migrant pain and shame in Australia, Sara Wills