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Thinking About Cultural Resource Management
Thomas F. King
€ 152.13
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Description for Thinking About Cultural Resource Management
Hardback. Collection of provocative essays on how to improve cultural resource management practice by the leading consultant in the field. Series: Heritage Resource Management Series. Num Pages: 216 pages, bibliography, index. BIC Classification: 1KBB; JFC; JHMC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 237 x 152 x 19. Weight in Grams: 454.
Tom King knows cultural resource management. As one of its long-standing practitioners, a key person in developing the regulations, and a consultant, trainer, and author of several important books on the topic, King's ideas on CRM have had a large impact on contemporary practice. In this witty, sardonic book, he outlines ways of improving how cultural resources are treated in America. King tackles everything from disciplinary blinders, NAGPRA, and the National Register to flaws in the Section 106 process, avaricious consultants, and the importance of meaningful consultation with native peoples. This brief work is an important source of new ideas for anyone working in this field and a good starting point for discussion in courses and training programs.
Product Details
Format
Hardback
Publication date
2002
Publisher
AltaMira Press,U.S. United States
Number of pages
216
Condition
New
Series
Heritage Resource Management Series
Number of Pages
216
Place of Publication
California, United States
ISBN
9780759102132
SKU
V9780759102132
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Thomas F. King
Dr. Thomas F. King is recognized as a national expert on cultural and historic preservation laws and practice, about which he teaches dozens of courses annually and has authored three books. Former program director at the Advisory Council for Historic Preservation, he is the primary author of many existing historic preservation regulations and guidelines. He also served as an archaeologist and historic preservation specialist in the former U.S. Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, as archaeologist for the National Park Service, and as head of archaeological surveys at three universities and helped create the Micronesia Archaeological Survey. King serves as Project Archaeologist for the Amelia Earhart Project, sponsored by The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR), and is lead author of Amelia Earhart's Shoes, about the search for Earhart. He holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from University of California, Riverside.
Reviews for Thinking About Cultural Resource Management
Thinking About Cultural Resource Management: Essays from the Edge...includes thoughtful articles on a wide range of topics including meaningful consultation with Native People and biases among archaeologists.
Sacred Sites Newsletter, Vol. 13.1 (Fall 2002)
King's critical voice is indeed a refreshing retort to the uncritical literature that frequently appears in cultural resource management and historic preservation policy publications...King's rebukes encourage a new line of thinking about CRM: a much more critical understanding of the regulations that govern our work and the fragmented sources of power that often lie behind it.
Kirk E. Ranzetta
Vernacular Architecture Newsletter, No. 97, Fall 2003
A substantial contribution to American historical and archaeological resources at both intellectual and hands-on levels...a worthy enterprise...I can commend this to anybody in CRM domains...happily and strongly recommend[ed]
Bruce Rippeteau, University of South Carolina
American Antiquity, Vol. 69, No. 1, 2004
This book is...interesting in providing a context for the growth of the heritage industry...the underpinning issues are highly relevant...the book should be compulsory reading for heritage professionals, both within and outside government agencies.
Michael Pearson, University of Canberra
Historic Environment, Vol. 17, No. 2, 2003
This book contains the same rational, articulate and pointed critique of CRM laws and their implementation that we have come to expect and enjoy from King....I strongly recommend this book to anyone involved in cultural resource management and believe it should be a fundamental teaching tool for university courses.
Kurt E. Dongoske, Zuni Cultural Resource Enterprise
Kiva, Vol. 69, Nr. 4, Summer 2004
I promise you a great read, lots of opportunities to live inside of Tom King's head for a little while and find out exactly what a cosmic, marvelously contentious and critically important thought space that really is. Anyone who is on the consulting or receiving end of CRM practice should see this book as a must-read. It is not a primer on process, but rather a sequence of considerations on the 'why'-ness of it all, and how we as a national community have more, or less, managed our collective cultural affairs....you will get high humor in the midst of the dandy diatribes.
Deborah Morse-Kahn Regional Research Associates, Director, Regional Research Associates King effectively provoked me into a critical evaluation of what we are trying to accomplish with CRM. I recommend this volume as food for thougt to CRM practitioners, government regulators and teachers of CRM practice at universities and colleges.
L.J. (Butch) Amundson, (Stantec Consulting Ltd., Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Canadian Journal of Archaeology
Few individuals are better placed to provide sage advice and observation about the current state of CRM practice than King.
Erik Nordberg
Industrial Archeology, Vol. 28, No. 2, 2002
Sacred Sites Newsletter, Vol. 13.1 (Fall 2002)
King's critical voice is indeed a refreshing retort to the uncritical literature that frequently appears in cultural resource management and historic preservation policy publications...King's rebukes encourage a new line of thinking about CRM: a much more critical understanding of the regulations that govern our work and the fragmented sources of power that often lie behind it.
Kirk E. Ranzetta
Vernacular Architecture Newsletter, No. 97, Fall 2003
A substantial contribution to American historical and archaeological resources at both intellectual and hands-on levels...a worthy enterprise...I can commend this to anybody in CRM domains...happily and strongly recommend[ed]
Bruce Rippeteau, University of South Carolina
American Antiquity, Vol. 69, No. 1, 2004
This book is...interesting in providing a context for the growth of the heritage industry...the underpinning issues are highly relevant...the book should be compulsory reading for heritage professionals, both within and outside government agencies.
Michael Pearson, University of Canberra
Historic Environment, Vol. 17, No. 2, 2003
This book contains the same rational, articulate and pointed critique of CRM laws and their implementation that we have come to expect and enjoy from King....I strongly recommend this book to anyone involved in cultural resource management and believe it should be a fundamental teaching tool for university courses.
Kurt E. Dongoske, Zuni Cultural Resource Enterprise
Kiva, Vol. 69, Nr. 4, Summer 2004
I promise you a great read, lots of opportunities to live inside of Tom King's head for a little while and find out exactly what a cosmic, marvelously contentious and critically important thought space that really is. Anyone who is on the consulting or receiving end of CRM practice should see this book as a must-read. It is not a primer on process, but rather a sequence of considerations on the 'why'-ness of it all, and how we as a national community have more, or less, managed our collective cultural affairs....you will get high humor in the midst of the dandy diatribes.
Deborah Morse-Kahn Regional Research Associates, Director, Regional Research Associates King effectively provoked me into a critical evaluation of what we are trying to accomplish with CRM. I recommend this volume as food for thougt to CRM practitioners, government regulators and teachers of CRM practice at universities and colleges.
L.J. (Butch) Amundson, (Stantec Consulting Ltd., Saskatoon, Saskatchewan)
Canadian Journal of Archaeology
Few individuals are better placed to provide sage advice and observation about the current state of CRM practice than King.
Erik Nordberg
Industrial Archeology, Vol. 28, No. 2, 2002