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Email Alerts Search this journal Advanced Journal Search » Proposals for a Practical System of Significance Evaluation in Archaeological Heritage Management Jos Deeben Bert J. Groenewoudt Daan P. Hallewas
Dutch State Archaeological Service, Amersfoort Willem J. H. Willems University of Leiden Abstract Significance evaluation plays a central role in archaeological heritage management. In this paper, a practical approach is presented based on experiences and recent discussions in the Netherlands. A restricted number of values (perception, physical quality and intrinsic quality) are operationalized as criteria in order to evaluate archaeological phenomena. In this manner, a more transparent framework is created to help determine if a monument is worth preserving. In the process of selection, monuments worth preserving are scrutinized from the viewpoints of policy considerations and priorities in archaeological heritage management in order to select monuments deserving of sustained preservation. The form of this system of significance evaluation is such that it can be used by all government levels, that the process is understandable for non-archaeologists, and that its results remain relevant from a research perspective. archaeological heritage management Netherlands selection valuation
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Twitter What's this? « Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents This Article doi: 10.1177/146195719900200203 European Journal of Archaeology August 1999 vol. 2 no. 2 177-199 » AbstractFree Full Text (PDF)Free to you References Services Email this article to a colleague Alert me when this article is cited Alert me if a correction is posted Similar articles in this journal Download to citation manager Request Permissions Request Reprints Load patientINFORMation Citing Articles Load citing article information Citing articles via Scopus Citing articles via Web of Science Citing articles via Google Scholar Google Scholar Articles by Deeben, J. Articles by Willems, W. J. H. Search for related content Related Content Load related web page information Share
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Twitter What's this? Current Issue December 2010, 13 (3)
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