ABSTRACT

A number of developments in the museum movement during the last few years have forced museums to give greater attention to ethical issues. Members of a profession are increasingly regarded constituting an ethical community. Every person with such a community must have a sense of personal obligation as well as a responsibilty for others to assure ethical achievement. This volume firmly places notions of ethics in the field of action.
Museum Ethics considers the theoretical and practical elements of the philosophy of conduct in relation to critical contemporaty issues and museums. This discussion encompasses the procurement of artifacts, the rights of indigenous peoples, repatriation, the politics of display, the conservation of objects and the role of education, as well as the day-to-day management of a museum. All persons active in museum matters, whether custodian, curator, or trustee have an ethical obligation to the museum profession and the public. This volume will allow the professional and student to work towards a more responsible and responsive museum community.

part |1 pages

Part I Ethics for Museums

chapter 1|14 pages

Ethics

chapter 2|17 pages

Ethics and the Profession

chapter 3|17 pages

Ethics and Museums

chapter 4|18 pages

Ethics and Duty

chapter 5|16 pages

Ethics and Truth

chapter 6|16 pages

Ethics and the Museum Community

chapter 7|18 pages

Ethics as a Code

part |1 pages

Part II Ethical Perspectives

chapter |2 pages

Introduction to Part II

chapter 8|10 pages

Ethics and Cultural Identity

chapter 9|13 pages

Ethics and Indigenous Peoples

chapter 10|8 pages

Ethics and Training

chapter 11|8 pages

Ethics and Museology

chapter 12|10 pages

Ethics and the Environment

chapter 13|8 pages

Ethics and Collecting

chapter 14|10 pages

Ethics and Preventive Conservation

chapter 15|7 pages

Ethics and Conservation

chapter 16|7 pages

Ethics and Exhibitions

chapter 17|10 pages

Ethics and Public Programs