Topics & Issues
Antiquities Trade
Order By: Title | Source Type
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17 Great Archaeology Blogs on the Antiquities Trade and Looting That YOU Should Read.
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Acquisitions Archaeology — Professional Ethics
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Against the universal museum
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American Schools of Oriental Research Blog
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An Archaeologist’s View of “Digger” Shows
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Archaeological Ethics
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Archaeological Ethics (Reading List on WorldCat)
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Archaeological Ethics (Second Edition)
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Archaeological Ethics and Law
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Archaeological Ethics and the Law
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Archaeological Looting in Central Italy: Developing Protection Strategies
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Archaeology and the Ethics of Collecting
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Archaeology and the Public
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Archaeology and the Public
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Archaeology, Cultural Heritage, and the Antiquities Trade
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Auctioning Atari: Archaeology, Ethics, and Contemporary Practice
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Back from the Future: ISIS and the Impact of the Present on the Past in the Present
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Centre for the Ethics of Cultural Heritage
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Classical Archaeology Today: Ethical Issues of Excavation, Ownership, and Display
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Could Brexit present an opportunity to return the Parthenon Marbles?
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Cultural Policy: Cultural Heritage and Cultural Diplomacy
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Diggers Done Right
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Digging and Destruction: Artifact Collecting as Meaningful Social Practice
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Do You Get to Keep What You Find?
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Edge of an Ethical Dilemma
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Ethical Issues in Archaeology
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Ethics and Archaeological Praxis
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Ethics in American Archaeology (2nd Revised Edition)
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Ethics in American archaeology: challenges for the 1990s
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Ethics, Archaeology, and Cultural Heritage
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Field Archaeologists as Eyewitnesses to Site Looting
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Free Ports Bound to Cultural Property Trafficking Ties
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Greece, the Parthenon Marbles & UNESCO
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Heritage and its Entanglements: Representing, Collecting, and Preserving Cultural Identity
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Heritage Ethics and Archaeological Practice in the Middle East and Mediterranean
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Heritage Matters: Introduction to Heritage Management
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Historical Archaeology will be Televised: Ethics, Archaeology, and Popular Culture
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How Archaeologists and Artifact Collectors Can—and Should—Collaborate to Comply with Legal and Ethical Antiquities Codes
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How the World Works: The Anthropology of Consumption and Globalization
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Illicit trafficking, provenance research and due diligence… and confidence and risk
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Indigenous groups in Canada call for National Museum of Scotland to return human remains
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Licensed for sale?
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Lies, damned lies, and archaeologists: Antiquities trafficking research as criminology and the ethics of identification
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Looting and the World’s Archaeological Heritage: The Inadequate Response
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Looting Matters
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Looting Matters
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Losing Knowledge: A Challenge for Archaeology
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Man Found Guilty for Trafficking Over 500 Artifacts from Mexico to Big Bend National Park
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Museum Education and Archaeological Ethics: An Approach to the Illicit Trade of Antiquities
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Museums and Professional Responsibilities
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Natural and Cultural Heritage in Global Perspective
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Natural Disasters and Their Impact on Looting and Destruction of Cultural Heritage
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Nazis, Ethics and Tolerance
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New U.S. Import Restrictions on Syrian Archaeological and Ethnographic Material
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Plundered Empire: Acquiring Antiquities from Ottoman Lands
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Policies, Practices and Archaeology in Historic Preservation
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Policies, Practices and Archaeology in Historic Preservation
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Reading and Composition: Archaeological Ethics
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Repatriating One’s Own Cultural Heritage: The Te Pahi Medal
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Stanford Symposium on the Ethics and Legal Issues in Collecting “African Art”
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The “Other” Meaning of Value in Archaeology: The Uncomfortable Topics of Money, Looting, and Artifacts of Questionable Origin
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The Ethics of Collaborating with Artifact Collectors
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The Ethics of Context: Exploring Assumptions in Discussions About the Looting of Archaeological Sites
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The Ethics of Historical Archaeology
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The Hobby Lobby Case and the Black Market in Portable Antiquities
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The legal framework for destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: A War-crime? (5/7)
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The legal framework for destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: Further legal considerations (6/7)
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The legal framework for the destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: Concluding considerations (7/7)
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The legal framework for the destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: Overview (1/7)
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The legal framework for the destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: The manuscripts and shrines of Timbuktu (3/7)
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The legal framework for the destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: The significance of the cases (4/7)
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The legal framework for the destruction of cultural heritage in Timbuktu during 2012-2013: What is the background for destruction of cultural heritage? (2/7)
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The Rihani ‘provenance’
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The STOP Act: Proposed Legislation to Stop the Export of Native American Cultural Patrimony
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The Transatlantic Trade in African Ancestors: Mijikenda Memorial Statues (Vigango) and the Ethics of Collecting and Curating Non-Western Cultural Property
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Who owns the past? Cultural Policy, Cultural Property, and the Law
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Why programs like “Battlefield Recovery” show that archeologists’ work with the media is far from done