American Journal of Archaeology | The Journal of the Archaeological Institute of America
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January 2013 (117.1)
Archaeological Site Looting in “Glocal” Perspective: Nature, Scope, and Frequency
Archaeological Site Looting in “Glocal” Perspective: Nature, Scope, and Frequency
The looting of archaeological sites undermines the preservation of cultural heritage. The purpose of this study is to broaden and refine our understanding of the nature, geographic scope, and frequency of looting and archaeological site destruction and to place looting in global perspective. Situated within a “glocal” (global and local) context, this study focuses on a large sample of field archaeologists working throughout the world and their opinions about and personal encounters with looting. Some key findings are presented: first, that the overwhelming majority of surveyed field archaeologists have experienced looting firsthand on more than one occasion; second, that archaeological site looting is in fact a globally pervasive problem and is not limited to certain parts of the world to the exclusion of others. The paper ends with a consideration of the implications of such findings for the broader cultural heritage debate.
Archaeological Site Looting in “Glocal” Perspective: Nature, Scope, and Frequency
By Blythe Bowman Proulx
American Journal of Archaeology Vol. 117, No. 1 (January 2013), pp. 111–125
DOI: 10.3764/aja.117.1.0111
© 2013 Archaeological Institute of America
