4th June 2014, 06:06 PM
P Prentice Wrote:most decisions to try to develop are made prior to any attempt to understand the heritage impact. developers buy a statement to support their application (or they wouldn't submit it).
even worse when OldGerkinHead gets involved :
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2012...ing-powers
VinegaryTyrants aside...problem (again) is lack of scrutiny/'peer review' of heritage related planning decisions / consultants input / contractors output
> its too late after the event (when documents might be available), and extremely difficult to make headway (from outside as a 'third party') while a plan is under review or being executed...
This would all be fine if we could 'trust' the consultants and councils to perform to highest professional and research (IFA) standards...but there appear to be a range of cases where this could be questioned > we should examine these, as they shed light on the functionality of the overall system. > for example, the tendering and monitoring process
..and i think we need to remember to focus on the role of the increasingly 'heritage-aware' public, and our own research objectives as archaeologists...
That is to say, a preference for being a 'public-' or 'research-focused' archaeologist, rather than a "developer-focused archaeologist" (!?!), as sought by a recent job advert...
>>> even better; an archaeology focused archaeologist
I find it worrying that "developer-focused" executives (esp in the IFA) seem to be setting the agenda for standards and practice, without necessarily making sure these are carried out in reality.
One doesn't need to explicity recommend a devlopment to play the heritage in such a way as reduce its apparent significance or value > certain types of archaeology are more prone to this than others (eg early prehistory, lithics, and other 'ephemeral' remains), whilst others seem always to get the full-bells-and-whistles (eg Roman stuff) > maybe this just because the paper work, significance assessment and project design is easier.{