JAIC 2001, Volume 40, Number 2, Article 5 (pp. 137 to 146)
JAIC online
Journal of the American Institute for Conservation
JAIC 2001, Volume 40, Number 2, Article 5 (pp. 137 to 146)

ARCHAEOLOGISTS ON CONSERVATION: HOW CODES OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL ETHICS AND PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS TREAT CONSERVATION

SUSAN I. ROTROFF


ABSTRACT—Object conservators work within a variety of contexts. Although they are guided by their own code of professional standards, their work is also affected by the codes and practices of the other professionals with whom they work. This article examines the attention given to conservation in the professional codes, standards, and guidelines of the three largest archaeological societies in the United States—the Archaeological Institute of America, the Society for American Archaeology, and the Society for Historical Archaeology—and of the Register of Professional Archaeologists, an organization devoted to the maintenance of professional standards in archaeology. It also discusses the treatment of conservation in guidelines developed by the American School of Classical Studies at Athens and by the American Schools of Oriental Research, which sponsor American excavations in Greece and the Near East. The purpose is to provide conservators with information on the attitudes toward conservation that are shared by the archaeologists with whom they collaborate, especially in the context of excavation.
[Spanish Abstract] [French Abstract]

Article Sections:

1. INTRODUCTION
2. PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
3. RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
4. THE STICK OR THE CARROT
5. PAST, PRESENT, AND A SUGGESTION FOR THE FUTURE
6. CONCLUSIONS
a: Notes , References , Author Information
Entire Article

Copyright � 2001 American Institution for Conservation of Historic & Artistic Works