ScienceOpen:
research and publishing network
For Publishers
Discovery
Metadata
Peer review
Hosting
Publishing
For Researchers
Join
Publish
Review
Collect
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Blog
About
Search
Advanced search
My ScienceOpen
Sign in
Register
Dashboard
Search
Search
Advanced search
For Publishers
Discovery
Metadata
Peer review
Hosting
Publishing
For Researchers
Join
Publish
Review
Collect
Blog
About
4
views
0
references
Top references
cited by
1
Cite as...
0 reviews
Review
0
comments
Comment
0
recommends
+1
Recommend
0
collections
Add to
0
shares
Share
Twitter
Sina Weibo
Facebook
Email
2,327
similar
All similar
Record
: found
Abstract
: not found
Book Chapter
: not found
The Ethics of Archaeology
What value a unicorn's horn? A study of archaeological uniqueness and value
edited-book
Author(s):
Robin Coningham
,
Rachel Cooper
,
Mark Pollard
Publication date:
January 19 2006
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Read this book at
Publisher
Buy book
Review
Review book
Invite someone to review
Bookmark
Cite as...
There is no author summary for this book yet. Authors can add summaries to their books on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Related collections
Value-based Healthcare
Author and book information
Book Chapter
Publication date:
January 19 2006
Pages
: 260-272
DOI:
10.1017/CBO9780511817656.015
SO-VID:
0f550903-6a8f-42d0-8b45-14f5da63bcd0
History
Data availability:
Comments
Comment on this book
Sign in to comment
Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction
pp. 46
Is culture a commodity?
pp. 115
Trust and archaeological practice: towards a framework of Virtue Ethics
pp. 131
Truthfulness and ‘inclusion’ in archaeology
pp. 146
Ethics and Native American reburials: a philosopher's view of two decades of NAGPRA
pp. 163
Stewardship gone astray? Ethics and the SAA
pp. 219
A plea for responsibility towards the common heritage of mankind
pp. 242
The ethics of the World Heritage concept
pp. 260
What value a unicorn's horn? A study of archaeological uniqueness and value
pp. 69
Moral arguments on subsistence digging
pp. 97
Human subjects review and archaeology: a view from Indian country
pp. 181
Can archaeology harm the dead?
pp. 199
Archaeological ethics and the people of the past
Similar content
2,327
The opioid litigation unicorn
Authors:
NP Terry
A comparative study on the growth environment of unicorn enterprises in Beijing and Shanghai——from the perspective of urban innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystem
Authors:
Q. Chen
It's Not Always Rainbows and Unicorns: The Lived Experience of Severe Maternal Morbidity Among Black Women
Authors:
L. CANTY
See all similar