The inherent sharing of conservation decisions
Material type: ArticleDescription: 11 pISBN:- 0039-3630
- Conservation decision making
- Conservation ethics
- Conservation philosophy
- Conservation theory
- Ètica de conservació
- Ética de conservación
- Filosofía de la conservación
- heritage values
- La decision de realizar la conservaciñon
- La decisó de realitzar la conservació
- teoria de la conservació
- Teoria de la conservación
- valores patrimoniales
- valors patrimonials
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Article de revista | Biblioteca de l' Escola Superior Conservació i Restauració de Bens Culturals de Catalunya | Studies in Conservation 3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | R: 2794 | Art-425 |
Browsing Biblioteca de l' Escola Superior Conservació i Restauració de Bens Culturals de Catalunya shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | No cover image available | ||
Studies in conservation 3 Study of Fe(II) sulphides in waterlogged archaeological wood. | Studies in Conservation 3 The decorative in the urban Vienna: Its preservation | Studies in Conservation 3 Stress corrosion cracking in ancient silver | Studies in Conservation 3 The inherent sharing of conservation decisions | Studies in Conservation 3 Trichogramma evanescens contre Tineola bisselliella: expérience de lutte biologique contre la mite des vêtements dans une réserve d'objets ethnographiques | Studies in conservation 3 The impact of chloride desalination on the corrosion rate of archaeological iron | Studies in Conservation 3 Using optical cherence tomography to characterize thick-glaze structure: Chinese Southern Song Guan glaze case study |
This paper provides an understanding of an under-explored aspect of the sharing of conservation decisions. In particular, it argues that conservation decisions are inherently shared in at least three senses. First conservation is conceived as a field of shared values, principles, and decision-making methodology, and aspires to a universally shared ethic. This view is supported by the logical and ethical consistency of existing Codes of Ethics, and is made manifest with the aid of a conceptual model of what science is. Second, conservation decisions are conditioned by the identity of heritage entities. The values comprising the heritage identity of an entity transcend space and time boundaries; they are interrelated and interdependent and, as such, shared. Third, the benefits but also the harms stemming from conservation decisions and actions are distributed and shared among for whom the object of a conservation decision is heritage. As dictated by the do-no-harm principle, conservators have a duty to consider risks of such harms when making decisions.
There are no comments on this title.