17th August 2010, 01:45 PM
Apology accepted and explanation understood. :face-kiss:
The circular arguement is indeed the one thing that is perhaps most important out of all of this. I have to say I am slightly raised eyebrow at the results, however it shows (albeit small at the moment) a desire for accountability and full accreditation. Now to my mind the circular arguement keeps coming back to the need for strong curatorial powers AND accountability. As well as a general consistency in approach nationwide... There are general codes and guidance for contractors in the RAO scheme, why not for curatoial services dealing in development control. So a site in Kent or a site in Highland would both be dealt with in the same general way. The IfA are perhaps trying to run before they can walk in this respect to - I perhaps perceive a feeling that if there is such a thing as chartered archaeologist (and again, this is very vague... who to include? as archaeology unlike accounting and architects, surveyors and the like) everything will sort itself out (though Tim does admit it is not a panacea)
Currently there is a seizure rippling through archaeology - a crisis of who we are, what we do, what we should charge, who polices standards, accommodation, travel, etc etc.... lets put some effort into these, so that if and when chartered archaeology happens then we are big boys who have a grip on the profession rather than infants dressed in dads suit. I also feel there should be a distinction between commercial archaeology in a development context (temporal contamination removal) and for want of a better word, rescue archaeology... and pure research archaeology (of which community/public archaeology is a subset) Lets get the house in some semblance of order, then go to the table. I for one would be happy to be thoroughly tested for Chartered status (I might even get it!) But it has to be worth my while... and as has been said repeatedly, the same is true for MIFAness... currently its nice to have, but not essential, you could not stop me for example from carrying out archaeology work... nobody can... as long as my commercial work is to the standard required by the curator. so being a MiFA or not is not top of my agenda. I tried it, but found that it was difficult to be me at the same time.
The circular argument is perhaps the key... time to break the cycle.
The circular arguement is indeed the one thing that is perhaps most important out of all of this. I have to say I am slightly raised eyebrow at the results, however it shows (albeit small at the moment) a desire for accountability and full accreditation. Now to my mind the circular arguement keeps coming back to the need for strong curatorial powers AND accountability. As well as a general consistency in approach nationwide... There are general codes and guidance for contractors in the RAO scheme, why not for curatoial services dealing in development control. So a site in Kent or a site in Highland would both be dealt with in the same general way. The IfA are perhaps trying to run before they can walk in this respect to - I perhaps perceive a feeling that if there is such a thing as chartered archaeologist (and again, this is very vague... who to include? as archaeology unlike accounting and architects, surveyors and the like) everything will sort itself out (though Tim does admit it is not a panacea)
Currently there is a seizure rippling through archaeology - a crisis of who we are, what we do, what we should charge, who polices standards, accommodation, travel, etc etc.... lets put some effort into these, so that if and when chartered archaeology happens then we are big boys who have a grip on the profession rather than infants dressed in dads suit. I also feel there should be a distinction between commercial archaeology in a development context (temporal contamination removal) and for want of a better word, rescue archaeology... and pure research archaeology (of which community/public archaeology is a subset) Lets get the house in some semblance of order, then go to the table. I for one would be happy to be thoroughly tested for Chartered status (I might even get it!) But it has to be worth my while... and as has been said repeatedly, the same is true for MIFAness... currently its nice to have, but not essential, you could not stop me for example from carrying out archaeology work... nobody can... as long as my commercial work is to the standard required by the curator. so being a MiFA or not is not top of my agenda. I tried it, but found that it was difficult to be me at the same time.
The circular argument is perhaps the key... time to break the cycle.