000 04368cam a22003618a 4500
001 16620931
003 JGU
005 20170805195037.0
007 Hard Bound
008 110122s2011 enk b 001 0 eng
020 _a9781405198738
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
082 0 0 _a363.69
_222
_bCO-
245 0 2 _aCompanion to cultural resource management
260 _aChichester
_bWiley-Blackwell
_c2011
300 _axv,579p.
490 0 _aBlackwell companions to anthropology
_v17
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: Acknowledgements. -- Contributor Biographies. -- Introduction. -- 1. Studying and Evaluation the Built Environment. -- 2. Principles of Architectural Preservation. -- 3. Archaeology of the Distant Past. -- 4. Archaeological Sites of the Recent Past. -- 5. Space, Place and Landscape: Geographies of Cultural Resource Management. -- 6. Where Nature and Culture Meet: Managing Culturally Significant Natural Resources. -- 7. History as a Cultural Resource. -- 8. "This Belongs in a Museum?" Portable Cultural Property. -- 9. Values are in the Mind: "Intangible" Cultural Resources. -- 10. Religious Belief and Practice. -- 11. Managing Language as an Integrated Cultural Resource. -- 12. In Too Deep: Challenges of Maritime Archaeology. -- 13. Keeping Historic Watercraft Afloat. -- 14. Enfants Terribles - Historic Aircraft and Spacecraft. -- 15. Studying and Managing Aerospace Crash Sites. -- 16. Rockets, Tang?, and Telescopes: Evaluating and Managing Technical and Scientific Properties. -- 17. Fields of Conflict. -- 18. Managing Our Military Heritage. -- 19. All in Line: The Challenge of Linear Resources and Linear Projects. -- 20. Rock Art as Cultural Resource. -- 21. Consultation in Cultural Resource Management: An Indigenous Perspective. -- 22. Where We're From: The Perspective of a Displaced People. -- 23. The Legal M?lange. -- 24. International Variety in CRM. -- 25. Consultation and Negotiation. -- 26. CRM in a United States Government Agency: Some Thoughts on Surviving and Succeeding While Working for Federal Land Managing Agencies. -- 27. Making a Living in CRM: First, A Discouraging Word. -- 28. The Historic Built Environment: A Planning Perspective from the Western United States. -- 29. Cultural Resource Management at War. -- The Military and Anthropologists in Iraq, 2004-2007: Discovering Shared Interests and Values. -- 30. A Future for Cultural Resource Management?.
520 _a"A Companion to Cultural Resource Management is an indispensible guide to students, beginning practitioners, and others wishing to gain a deeper understanding of the field of cultural resource management. Each article is authored by CRM experts or representatives of the voices of affected groups, including archaeologists, architectural historians, museum curators, historians and independent researchers who help build an understanding of cultural and heritage management, around the globe, and how it may develop in the future. These authors identify and illustrate the problems and realities that face practitioners 'on the ground'. The Companion gives a detailed account of the identification and management of particular cultural resource types, such as historic structures, archaeological sites, artifacts, natural places with cultural significance, languages, and religious beliefs. Other sections focus on practice in government agencies and consulting firms. The broad range of topics and perspectives in this new Companion offers critical ideas and practical knowledge to those working with CRM or heritage management throughout the world. "--
650 0 _aHistoric sites
_xConservation and restoration.
_916263
650 0 _aHistoric buildings
_xConservation and restoration.
_916264
650 0 _aArchitecture
_xConservation and restoration.
_916265
650 0 _aHistoric preservation.
_916266
650 0 _aCultural property
_xProtection.
_916267
650 7 _aSOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural
_2bisacsh.
_916268
651 0 _aCultural policy.
_916269
651 0 _aAntiquities
_xCollection and preservation.
_916270
700 1 _aKing, Thomas F
_916271
856 4 2 _3Cover image
_uhttp://catalogimages.wiley.com/images/db/jimages/9781405198738.jpg
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c12939
_d12939