Abstract
Shoshaunna Parks, Patricia A. McAnany and Satoru Murat
The Conservation of Maya Cultural Heritage: Searching for Solutions in
a Troubled Region
Journal of Field Archaeology 31 (2006) 425--432
Maya archaeological heritage continues to be a victim of looting,
urbanization, and development despite the increased visibility of the
issue within the field of archaeology. This article provides a
generalized network analysis of the destruction of Maya cultural
heritage in southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, western Honduras, and
El Salvador based on interviews conducted in 2006 by the Maya Area
Cultural Heritage Initiative (MACHI) with archaeologists, government
officials, non-governmental organizations, and Maya leaders. According
to informants, interest among local people to conserve archaeological
sites has been deeply affected by a lack of education about both Maya
archaeology and the national and international laws assuring protection
of cultural heritage; many local people, including members of modern
Maya groups, see little value in the conservation of the Precolumbian
past. MACHI suggests that an effective way to mitigate looting and the
wanton destruction of Maya cultural heritage is through the promotion
of a variety of educational initiatives (ranging from informal to
institutional, for both children and adults) that seek to combine the
knowledge of Western archaeological science with indigenous ways of
knowing the past. Such initiatives could encourage the construction of
positive relationships between indigenous and other local peoples and
archaeological remains.
Volume 31 Number 4 (Winter 2006)
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