Wir stehen drauf! Österreich, die Faro-Konvention und archäologische Bürgerbeteiligung
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Standard Standard
In: Archäologische Informationen, Vol. 39, 21.02.2016.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
HarvardHarvard
APA
CBE
MLA
VancouverVancouver
Author
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - Wir stehen drauf!
T2 - Österreich, die Faro-Konvention und archäologische Bürgerbeteiligung
AU - Karl, Raimund
PY - 2016/2/21
Y1 - 2016/2/21
N2 - On 23.1.2015, Austria ratified the Faro Convention (CoE 2005). The societal framework for Austrian archaeology has thus been fundamentally changed: signatory states commit to encouraging everyone to actively participate in the process of identification, study, interpretation, protection, conservation and presentation of the cultural heritage. The previous standard practice of Austrian professional archaeology to mostly exclude interested citizens from archaeological processes – whether the discovery of archaeology in situ or decisions about the future of finds and sites – thus is directly contradicted by international obligations that Austria has entered into: professional archaeology, which (at least allegedly) aims to work in the public interest, is now required to enable active public participation in archaeology. To pre-emptively and sustainably engage with this new situation, in spring 2015 the charity ArchaeoPublica was founded with support by the Austrian National Heritage Agency and other archaeological organisations. This charity aims to provide archaeologically supervised opportunities for public participation in archaeology and to encourage cooperation between interested citizens and professional archaeologists. First significant steps to increasing public participation in archaeological decision making processes have already been made by, for instance, trying to give heritage protection NGOs statutory participatory rights in EIA-procedures. Most Austrians dig archaeology and thus we now attempt to protect it collaboratively.
AB - On 23.1.2015, Austria ratified the Faro Convention (CoE 2005). The societal framework for Austrian archaeology has thus been fundamentally changed: signatory states commit to encouraging everyone to actively participate in the process of identification, study, interpretation, protection, conservation and presentation of the cultural heritage. The previous standard practice of Austrian professional archaeology to mostly exclude interested citizens from archaeological processes – whether the discovery of archaeology in situ or decisions about the future of finds and sites – thus is directly contradicted by international obligations that Austria has entered into: professional archaeology, which (at least allegedly) aims to work in the public interest, is now required to enable active public participation in archaeology. To pre-emptively and sustainably engage with this new situation, in spring 2015 the charity ArchaeoPublica was founded with support by the Austrian National Heritage Agency and other archaeological organisations. This charity aims to provide archaeologically supervised opportunities for public participation in archaeology and to encourage cooperation between interested citizens and professional archaeologists. First significant steps to increasing public participation in archaeological decision making processes have already been made by, for instance, trying to give heritage protection NGOs statutory participatory rights in EIA-procedures. Most Austrians dig archaeology and thus we now attempt to protect it collaboratively.
KW - ARCHAEOLOGY
KW - Heritage management
KW - public participation
KW - Faro Convention
KW - Austria
U2 - 10.11588/ai.2016.1.33540
DO - 10.11588/ai.2016.1.33540
M3 - Erthygl
VL - 39
JO - Archäologische Informationen
JF - Archäologische Informationen
SN - 0341-2873
ER -