ABSTRACT
This innovative collection of essays from an international range of contributors describes various means of preserving, protecting and presenting vital cultural resources within the context of economic development, competing claims of "ownership" of particular cultural resources, modern uses of structures and space, and other aspects of late twentieth-century life.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 3|9 pages
Third World development and the threat to resource conservation: the case of Africa
C.A.F
chapter 7|17 pages
Now we know: the role of research in archaeological conservation practices in England
A.J.S
chapter 10|13 pages
Heritage management in Rhode Island: working with diverse partners and audiences
P A.R C C.T
chapter 11|22 pages
Heritage management by American Indian tribes in the Southwestern United States
R A, T.J.F J R.W
chapter 12|18 pages
The Arkansas Archeological Survey: a statewide cooperative programme to preserve the past
T J.G H A.D
chapter 13|8 pages
Articulation between archaeological practice and local politics in northwest Argentina
M C M
chapter 15|12 pages
Regional aspects of state policy relating to the protection of the cultural heritage and natural environment in the Russian Federation
Y.S.K, G.Z.V E.M.B
chapter 18|16 pages
Bringing archaeology to the public: programmes in the Southwestern United States
S L T H
chapter 21|12 pages
Public interpretation, education and outreach: the growing predominance in American archaeology
J H.J, J
chapter 24|6 pages
Teaching archaeology at the Museum San Miguel de Azapa in northernmost Chile
J C-G