Teaching Archaeological Heritage Management: Towards a Change in Paradigms




Willems Annemarie, Castillo Mena Alicia, Čeginskas Viktorija, Immonen Visa, Kalakoski Iida, Lähdesmäki Tuuli, Lähdesmäki Ulla, Gowen-Larsen Margaret, Marciniak Arkadiusz, Mazel Aron D., Pérez González Elena, Seif Assaad, Thomas Suzie, White Cheryl

PublisherRoutledge

2018

Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites

20

5-6

297

318

22

1350-5033

1753-5522

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/13505033.2018.1559423

https://doi.org/10.1080/13505033.2018.1559423



The
concept of archaeological heritage management (AHM) has been key to
wider archaeological research and preservation agendas for some decades.
Many universities and other education providers now offer what is best
termed heritage management education (HME) in various forms. The
emphasis is commonly on archaeological aspects of heritage in a broad
sense and different terms are often interchangeable in practice. In an
innovative working-conference held in Tampere, Finland, we initiated a
debate on what the components of AHM as a course or curriculum should
include. We brought together international specialists and discussed
connected questions around policy, practice, research and
teaching/training, at local, national, transnational and World Heritage
levels. In this article we take the Tampere discussions further,
focusing especially on the meaning, necessity, implications and
prerequisites of interdisciplinary HME. We offer our thoughts on
developing HME that reflects the contemporary aspects and needs of
heritage and its management.

KEYWORDS: Archaeological heritage managementheritage management educationteaching and trainingpracticeresearch



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 12:15