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The Responsibilities of Archaeologists: Archaeology and Ethics
Mark Pluciennik
The 11 papers in this volume derive from a series of seminars under the aegis of the Lampeter Workshop in Archaeology. The result is an attempt to broaden the debate and discuss the many problems that face archaeologists in the area of ethics today. It also aims to theorize some of the terms that have tended to be taken for granted in previous discussions. Many people engage with ethical issues in their everyday lives, including within their roles as archaeologists, but this thoughtful critical practice perhaps does not always become articulated in published form.
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Front Cover
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Title Page
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Copyright
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Table of Contents
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Introduction: the responsibilities of archaeologists
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Intellectuals and Apes: the Metaphor of Archaeology in Pierre Boulle's La Planete des singes
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Archaeology, advocacy and intellectualism
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Archaeology, funding and the responsibilities of the university
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Clients, contractors, curators and archaeology: who owns the past?
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Archaeologists as Intellectuals: Agents of the Empire or Defenders of Dissent?
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The responsibility of representation
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The responsibilities of ethnoarchaeologists
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Dear Yannis: A letter to an archaeologist or "From one Cultural Producer to another"
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Constructions and constraints: representing the discipline
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Archaeology and the burden of responsibility
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Notes on contributors
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Citable Link
Published: 2001
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781841712673 (paperback)
- 9781407353333 (ebook)
BAR Number: S981