Ethics and Governance
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2014
These papers relate to questions that count on the future of archaeology in light of current political and ethical concerns and issues. In this context, traditional research paradigms are questioned in a series of thought provoking papers. With greater attention given to new lines of enquiry in historical archaeology, it is proposed that our discipline is oriented towards a more productive use of archaeological resources.
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-7 of 7)
- Documents (7)
- Arguing for an Archaeology of Dog Fighting (2014)
- Art and Archaeology of Konark Sun Temple:A World Heritage Site (2014)
- ‘Ethics’ bedrock is the practice of ethics’: some considerations on ethics in Italian archaeology (2014)
- Managing the archaeological heritage of Historical Flanders: medieval and early modern archaeology in a development-led context (2014)
- Marginalization Through Management: The Impacts of Irish Nationalism and Cultural Identity on Archaeological Sites and Landscapes (2014)
- Musée national Togo et gestion du patrimoine archéologique national (2014)
- Navigating the “’thorny theoretical thicket’”: Ethical codes and archaeological models under NAGPRA (2014)