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      Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century
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      Chapter

      Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century

      DOI link for Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century

      Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century book

      Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century

      DOI link for Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century

      Public archaeology in the United States in the early twenty-fi rst century book

      ByBARBARA J. LITTLE
      BookHeritage Studies

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2009
      Imprint Routledge
      Pages 24
      eBook ISBN 9780203871713
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      ABSTRACT

      In 1968, Salvage Archaeology was declining and CRM was on the horizon. Today CRM is declining and Public Archaeology is on the horizon.

      (Moore 2006: 33)

      There is no such thing as ‘private archeology’. (McGimsey 1972: 5)

      This is an interesting time to be writing about ‘public archaeology’ in the United States. The meaning and scope of the term are in fl ux, driven by practitioners and a wide variety of projects and rhetoric. As the quote by Lawrence Moore suggests, the archaeological landscape is changing. What exactly is on the horizon, however, remains to be seen. As Charles McGimsey strongly argued several decades ago, archaeologists who think they can work without responsibility to the public are fooling themselves.

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