Archaeologists around the world face complex ethical dilemmas that defy easy solutions. Ethics and law entwine, yet jurisprudence endures as the global praxis for guidance and result. Global legal norms articulate 'legal rights' and obligations while codes of professional conduct articulate 'ethical rights' and obligations. This article underscores how a rights discourse has shaped the 20th century discipline and practice of archaeology across the globe, including in the design and execution of projects like those discussed in the Journal of Field Archaeology. It illustrates how both law and ethics have been, and still are, viewed as two distinct solution-driven approaches that, even when out of sync, are the predominant frameworks that aff...
Within archaeology, concern over ethics has become a center point of debate, particularly in terms o...
The goal of the law is to encourage behaviour that is beneficial to society and to deter conduct tha...
Theory without practice is empty, practice without theory is blind, to adapt a phrase from Immanuel ...
This chapter considers how law and ethics affect professional practice and demonstrates how engageme...
Like its ancestral disciplines, archaeology is no stranger to human conflict. Greek and Roman warfar...
As archaeologists we are bound by professional codes and legal statutes, which typically presume the...
Moshenska, Gabriel et al.This volume examines the distinctive and highly problematic ethical questio...
The question of ethics and their role in archaeology has stimulated one of the discipline's livelies...
[Extract] Having recently returned to full-time employment in commercial archaeology after a period ...
[Extract] Having recently returned to full-time employment in commercial archaeology after a period ...
Landscape has emerged as a significant site for archaeological practice: for our explorations of the...
The ethical dimensions of Swedish archaeology will be discussed from several angles – those of the a...
The editors and contributors to this volume focus on the inherent political nature of archaeology an...
A consideration of ‘cultures of contact ’ for contemporary archaeological practice necessarily invol...
Theory without practice is empty, practice without theory is blind, to adapt a phrase from Immanuel ...
Within archaeology, concern over ethics has become a center point of debate, particularly in terms o...
The goal of the law is to encourage behaviour that is beneficial to society and to deter conduct tha...
Theory without practice is empty, practice without theory is blind, to adapt a phrase from Immanuel ...
This chapter considers how law and ethics affect professional practice and demonstrates how engageme...
Like its ancestral disciplines, archaeology is no stranger to human conflict. Greek and Roman warfar...
As archaeologists we are bound by professional codes and legal statutes, which typically presume the...
Moshenska, Gabriel et al.This volume examines the distinctive and highly problematic ethical questio...
The question of ethics and their role in archaeology has stimulated one of the discipline's livelies...
[Extract] Having recently returned to full-time employment in commercial archaeology after a period ...
[Extract] Having recently returned to full-time employment in commercial archaeology after a period ...
Landscape has emerged as a significant site for archaeological practice: for our explorations of the...
The ethical dimensions of Swedish archaeology will be discussed from several angles – those of the a...
The editors and contributors to this volume focus on the inherent political nature of archaeology an...
A consideration of ‘cultures of contact ’ for contemporary archaeological practice necessarily invol...
Theory without practice is empty, practice without theory is blind, to adapt a phrase from Immanuel ...
Within archaeology, concern over ethics has become a center point of debate, particularly in terms o...
The goal of the law is to encourage behaviour that is beneficial to society and to deter conduct tha...
Theory without practice is empty, practice without theory is blind, to adapt a phrase from Immanuel ...