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Heritage bureaucracies and the modern nation state. Towards an ethnography of archaeological systems of government

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 November 2016

Abstract

Drawing on examples from the West (Flanders) and developing East (Siberia, Russia), this paper investigates the subtle and often overlooked entanglements between the nation state and archaeology. Drawing on careful ethnographic assessments mapping the impact of the state on archaeological practice in Russia and Flanders, this paper illustrates that we need to transcend our traditional focus on nationalism and also look at the impact of bureaucratic procedures and documents. These at first sight benign systems of government greatly enmesh archaeologists with the nation state and its myriad of agendas, ultimately impacting both heritage management and academic research.

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Articles
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

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