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To browse Academia. Themes of the Annual Meeting The Annual Meeting themes, as defined by the Scientific Committee, incorporate the diversity of EAA and the multidimensionality of archaeological practice, including archaeological interpretation, heritage management and politics of the past and present.
Archaeological theory and methods beyond paradigms 2. Interpreting the archaeological record: artefacts, humans, and landscapes 3. Archaeology of mountainous landscapes 4. Digital archaeology, science and multidisciplinarity: new methods, new challenges 5. Archaeological heritage and museum management: future chances, future risks 6. Global change and archaeology. Michael Shanks. Some personal reflections on archaeology, 25 years after the first meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists in This is a talk I gave at the online meetings of the European Association of Archaeologists in August It was part of a session convened by Felipe Criado-Boado and Kristian Kristiansen, who had been organizers of the meetings in Santiago de Compostela in They asked contributors to reflect upon 25 years of change in European Archaeology.
I have been immensely influenced by the extraordinary leadership and vision of Felipe and Kristian, by the welcoming humanism of so many members of the EAA. My talk explores how we might conceive an archaeology that is centered upon community, collegiality, dialogue, in working with what remains of the past to build a better future. Alex Hale. It has long been common practice in many places across Europe to protect, preserve, and research monuments of the recent past—simply because they are there.
This is both a challenge and an opportunity for archaeological heritage management, considered in the EAC symposium papers. Archaeological heritage preservation gains weight because it is accompanied by a special interest from the public and, thus, can develop opportunities to participate in political education. The material remains of war and terror lead us to the limits of archaeology and beyond: they become evidence, crime scenes, and anchors for commemoration and political education.