Description
Book SynopsisChapter 1: Introduction: the only way is ethics.- Chapter 2: Ethics in action: a viewpoint from Israel/Palestine.- Chapter 3: Archaeological ethics and violence in post-genocide Rwanda.- Chapter 4: All our findings are under their boots! The monologue of violence in Iranian archaeology.- Chapter 5: Archaeology of historic conflicts, colonial oppression and political violence in Uruguay.- Chapter 6: Everything is kept in memory. Reflections on the memory sites of the dictatorship in Buenos Aires (Argentina).- Chapter 7: Archaeology, anthropology and civil conflict. The case of Spain.- Chapter 8: A gate to a darker world: excavating at the Tempelhof airport (Berlin).- Chapter 9: Archaeology, National Socialism and rehabilitation: the case of Herbert Jankuhn (1905-1990).- Chapter 10: The ethics of public engagement in the archaeology of modern conflict.- Chapter 11: Military advocacy of peaceful approaches for cultural property protection.- Chapter 12: Cognitive dissonance and the military-archaeology complex.- Chapter 13: Working as a forensic archaeologist and/or anthropologist in post-conflict contexts: a consideration of professional responsibilities to the missing, the dead and their relatives.- Chapter 14: Virtues impracticable and extremely difficult: The human rights of subsistence diggers.
Table of ContentsChapter 1: Introduction: the only way is ethics.- Chapter 2: Ethics in action: a viewpoint from Israel/Palestine.- Chapter 3: Archaeological ethics and violence in post-genocide Rwanda.- Chapter 4: All our findings are under their boots! The monologue of violence in Iranian archaeology.- Chapter 5: Archaeology of historic conflicts, colonial oppression and political violence in Uruguay.- Chapter 6: “Everything is kept in memory.” Reflections on the memory sites of the dictatorship in Buenos Aires (Argentina).- Chapter 7: Archaeology, anthropology and civil conflict. The case of Spain.- Chapter 8: A gate to a darker world: excavating at the Tempelhof airport (Berlin).- Chapter 9: Archaeology, National Socialism and rehabilitation: the case of Herbert Jankuhn (1905-1990).- Chapter 10: The ethics of public engagement in the archaeology of modern conflict.- Chapter 11: Military advocacy of peaceful approaches for cultural property protection.- Chapter 12: Cognitive dissonance and the military-archaeology complex.- Chapter 13: Working as a forensic archaeologist and/or anthropologist in post-conflict contexts: a consideration of professional responsibilities to the missing, the dead and their relatives.- Chapter 14: Virtues impracticable and extremely difficult: The human rights of subsistence diggers.