![]() ![]() We have excluded the latter from our discussion for a number of reasons: because skeletal remains raise complex issues that warrant extended discussion on their own because these issues are investigated in other contributions to this volume and because we have examined these issues in another context (see Groarke 2001). In this paper, we discuss the implications the SAA principles have for the treatment of archaeological artefacts other than skeletal remains. It ‘urges’ archaeologists to use these principles in establishing the responsibilities they have to archaeological resources, to those who have an interest in these resources and to those affected by archaeological work (SAA 2004 SAA Ethics in Archaeology Committee 2000). After much deliberation and debate, the Society for American Archaeology (the SAA) has ‘strongly’ endorsed ‘Principles of Archaeological Ethics’.
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