Private und öffentliche Interessen an Archäologie
Research output: Other contribution
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22 p. Archäologische Denkmalpflege. 2019, Blog. (Archäologische Denkmalpflege; Vol. 2).
Research output: Other contribution
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TY - GEN
T1 - Private und öffentliche Interessen an Archäologie
AU - Karl, Raimund
PY - 2019/12/19
Y1 - 2019/12/19
N2 - Many archaeologists and interested third parties believe - even if falsely - that the preservation, (if necessary) recovery and (after the latter) making publicly accessible all archaeological remains - whatever they might subjectively mean with the latter term - is 'the' one and only, generally accepted, immutable and most importantly all potentially existing ('minor' private and public) prevailing 'highest public interest' in 'the archaeology'. In this contribution, I demonstrate why this belief is wrong and ultimately even dangerous and thus must urgently be changed. Rather, the - actually existing - interest in the preservation, research and use of archaeological remains is - at least at first - a 'purely' private self-interest, primarily that of archaeologists and heritage managers and secondarily of interested third parties, which - at least a priori - is no different from any other potentially existing self-interests of other parties. Which one of the many potentially existing private and public interests in archaeology actually constitutes 'the' public interests is not immutably pre-determined, but has to be determined and judged on a case by case basis; with this process not necessarily always resulting in the self-interests of archaeologists and archaeology-interested third parties prevailing. Rather, (even often) the very opposite of what we want turns out to be 'the' public interest in 'the archaeology'. If we want to live in a constitutional democratic state, we will have to get to terms with this fact.
AB - Many archaeologists and interested third parties believe - even if falsely - that the preservation, (if necessary) recovery and (after the latter) making publicly accessible all archaeological remains - whatever they might subjectively mean with the latter term - is 'the' one and only, generally accepted, immutable and most importantly all potentially existing ('minor' private and public) prevailing 'highest public interest' in 'the archaeology'. In this contribution, I demonstrate why this belief is wrong and ultimately even dangerous and thus must urgently be changed. Rather, the - actually existing - interest in the preservation, research and use of archaeological remains is - at least at first - a 'purely' private self-interest, primarily that of archaeologists and heritage managers and secondarily of interested third parties, which - at least a priori - is no different from any other potentially existing self-interests of other parties. Which one of the many potentially existing private and public interests in archaeology actually constitutes 'the' public interests is not immutably pre-determined, but has to be determined and judged on a case by case basis; with this process not necessarily always resulting in the self-interests of archaeologists and archaeology-interested third parties prevailing. Rather, (even often) the very opposite of what we want turns out to be 'the' public interest in 'the archaeology'. If we want to live in a constitutional democratic state, we will have to get to terms with this fact.
KW - ARCHAEOLOGY
KW - Heritage
KW - Heritage law
KW - Heritage management
M3 - Cyfraniad Arall
SN - 978-3-7502-6696-4
VL - 2
T3 - Archäologische Denkmalpflege
PB - Archäologische Denkmalpflege
ER -