ASOR Policy on Preservation and Protection of Archaeological Resources |
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directly to: Main policy or by Joe D. Seger, past ASOR President The degradation of archaeological resources through the looting of sites, theft of artifacts, and illicit international trade in antiquities has become an increasing concern worldwide among archaeological professionals and their friends since the 1970s. In 1982 the United States ratified the UNESCO Convention of the Illicit Import, Export, and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property, joining an international effort to discourage artifact theft and looting. In 1987 the ASOR Board of Trustees recorded a resolution in general support of the UNESCO accord. However, events during the Gulf War in 1991 generated increased awareness of the vulnerability of Middle Eastern archaeological resources. At that time ASOR's Board of Trustees asked its Committee on Archaeological Policy (CAP) to undertake a more thorough review of its policy position with respect to this matter. Under the leadership of Dr. Ellen Herscher, a subcommittee of CAP labored for three years in the study of the issues involved. In the fall of 1994 the subcommittee presented CAP with a draft of a new and more deliberate policy statement. Comments on this draft were solicited from the ASOR constituency via the Winter 1994 ASOR Newsletter (Vol. 44, 4: 3-4). Though comments in response were very limited, the subcommittee gave all those it received considered attention. In its subsequent meeting, on 16 November 1995, CAP approved the draft of the policy statement as previously presented and moved to recommend it to the ASOR Board. The statement was made the official policy of ASOR by unanimous vote of the Board of Trustees at its meeting 18 November 1995. With this action ASOR more fully joined ranks with the other major American societies of professional archaeologists, including the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) and the Society for American Archaeology (SAA), each of which had previously published a similar detailed policy position statement on these matters. Along with its recommendation of the statement to the ASOR Board, CAP advised its prompt and wide circulation. While CAP itself has subsequently included it with the statement of standards and other information regularly distributed to all ASOR-affiliated excavations and publication projects, presentation of the statement here represents its first formal publication as official ASOR policy. We believe that the statement represents a fair and balanced approach to what are complex matters of ethical, cultural, and economic practice relating to the protection and preservation of archaeological resources. It sets forth minimum expectations for standards that should be observed by all those professionally involved or otherwise seriously concerned with proper treatment of archaeological sites and related cultural resources. We hope that it will also increase awareness among the general public with respect to the cultural liabilities incurred by improper treatment of the archaeological heritage. We urge everyone to give the statement a careful reading and encourage thoughtful consideration of the issues and concerns involved. |
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Statement of ASOR Policy on
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