1st Edition

Archaeological Heritage Management in the Modern World

Edited By Henry Cleere Copyright 1990
    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    Representing the latest thinking in this fast-moving and often emotive field, this book offers a remarkably comprehensive international coverage of the public aspects of archaeology. The process of survey and inventory, rescue and archaeology, conservation and protection have until now been studied largely on the basis of individual countries and their administrative and legislative structures. Now, by virtue of its broad geographical coverage, this volume provides many rights and guidelines not hitherto brought into focus: the history and philosophy of archaeological heritage management, case studies (regional, national and specialised), and the training and qualification of archaeologists for heritage management.
    This book is essential reading for all students, researchers and practitioners concerned with archaeological heritage management, public administration and the legal community whose work involves archaeological issues.

    List of contributors, Foreword, Preface, Introduction: the rationale of archaeological heritage management, APPROACHES TO HERITAGE MANAGEMENT, 1. Perspectives on the archaeological heritage: history and future, 2. World archaeology- the world's cultural heritage, 3. Significant until proven otherwise: problems versus representative samples, 4. Science, service and stewardship -a basis for the ideal archaeology of the future, 5. The 'cultural dimension of development'-an archaeological approach, 6. Cultural resource management and environmental education in Venezuela, 7. The ICOMOS International Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management (ICAHM), REGIONAL AND COUNTRY STUDIES, 8. 'Tread softly for you tread on my bones': the development of cultural resource management in Australia, 9. The administration of China's archaeological heritage, 10. Historical development and attendant problems of cultural resource management in the Philippines, 11. Cultural resource management in sub-Saharan Africa: Nigeria, Togo and Ghana, 12. Problems in the conservation and restoration of ruined buildings in Madagascar, 13. Archaeological rescue and conservation in the North Andean Area, 14. Cultural resource management at the federal, provincial, municipal and corporate levels in southern Ontario, Canada, 15. Heritage management and training in England, 16. The management of the English landscape, 17. Government archaeology in Northern Ireland, 18. The new Spanish archaeological heritage legislation, 19. Archaeological heritage management in the USSR, 20. A review of the South African cultural heritage legislation, 1987, CASE STUDIES, 21. The Cultural Triangle of Sri Lanka, 22. Cultural resource management in the USDA Forest Service, 23. Cultural resource planning and management in a multiple-use agency, 24. A contractor's perspective of two approaches to cultural resource management in Arizona, 25. Stonehenge-past and future, 26. The Stonehenge we deserve, TRAINING AND QUALIFICATION OF ARCHAEOLOGISTS FOR HERITAGE MANAGEMENT, 27. Learning by doing: this is no way to treat archaeological resources, 28. A suggested training scheme for archaeological resource managers in tropical countries, 29. Policies for the training and recruitment of archaeologists in India, 30. Archaeology and conservation training at the international level, 31. The role of the professional institution, Index

    Biography

    Henry Cleere

    'This important volume deals with the hard realities of the environment in which archaeologists work....[it]...should be considered neccessary reading by archaeologists and others concerned with archaeological heritage management' - Archaeological Review from Cambridge

    `Vital reading for anyone seriously concerned with this aspect of [the archaeological] profession' - Antiquity