The organisers would like invite paper submissions for our session on
"De-colonisation at EAA 25 years on: the social-economic contribution of
cultural heritage conservation" at the 25th Annual Meeting of the European
Association of Archaeologists (EAA) in Bern, Switzerland, 4-7 September
2019. Abstracts should be 150 to 300 words, and the deadline is 14 February
2019.

Session abstract: De-colonisation at EAA 25 years on: the social-economic
contribution of cultural heritage conservation
Twenty-five years ago, when the first annual meeting of the EAA took place,
the term de-colonisation was practically unknown. De-colonisation today
forms a major challenge in heritage management, and represents a growing
issue, both between European states and outside Europe.
The case that successive Greek governments have made to Britain for the
repatriation of the Parthenon marbles, for example, is still unresolved,
while in France, the country’s president recently called for the
restitution of African cultural patrimony from French museums over the next
five years.
We will discuss different approaches in Europe and beyond as to how the
objects concerned are identified, how/if they are repatriated, and how
politics are involved, as well as social-economic consequences for the
museums concerned and for the communities to which cultural material is
restored.
The contribution that conservators and archaeological scientists make to
public concepts of the ownership of cultural heritage can help to structure
and support contemporary de-colonisation in a positive way. In this session
we seek to examine:
- what are the best practices for dealing with archaeological
artefacts "collected" (in retrospect, sometimes looted?) from sites in
former colonial nations;
- how conservation and scientific analysis help inform the archaeological
narrative;
- who, in an era of public funding cuts, will be responsible for the
scientific analysis of archaeological sites and artefacts;
- how digital solutions, such as virtual reality, can be successfully used
as innovative mediation methods in archaeology, e.g. with regard to human
remains, and in reconstruction of sites and objects;
- and what strategies can be recommended for artefact storage and
presentation.
In this session we aim to encourage considerate discussion of the evolving
contribution of archaeological conservation and the political and
social-economic impacts of de-colonisation in the 21st century, 25 years on
from the founding of the EAA.

Travel grants: Application details and selection criteria will be made
available under the Grants tab of the EAA 2019 Bern website.

Submission deadline: Please submit abstracts from the link on this page:
https://www.e-a-a.org/eaa2019 by the deadline of Thursday 14 FEBRUARY 2019.

If you have any questions please contact session co-organiser Dr Evelyne
Godfrey: [email protected]
******
Unsubscribe by sending a message to [email protected]
Searchable archives: http://cool.conservation-us.org/byform/mailing-lists/cdl/

Reply via email to