of Ethics Online Collection: 1994
AIA Code of Professional Standards
The following Code of Professional Standards was approved by the Council at its December 29, 1994 meeting, and amended at its December 29, 1997 meeting.
PREAMBLE
This Code applies to those members of the AIA who play an active,
professional role in the recovery, care, study, or publication of archaeological
material, including cultural resources located under water. Within the
Institute they enjoy the privileges of organizing sessions and submitting
papers for the Annual Meetings, of lecturing to local societies, participating
in the AIA committees that shape and direct the discipline, participating in the
placement service, and of being listed in the Directory of Professionals in Archaeology.
Along with those privileges come special responsibilities. Our members should inform
themselves about and abide by the laws of the countries in which they live and work.
They should treat others at home and in the field with respect and sensitivity.
As primary stewards of the archaeological record, they should work actively to preserve
that record in all its dimensions and for the long term; and they should give due
consideration to the interests of others, both colleagues and the lay public, who are
affected by the research.
The AIA recognizes that archaeology is a discipline dealing, in all its aspects,
with the human condition, and that archaeological research must often balance
competing ethical principles. This Code of Professional Standards does not seek
to legislate all aspects of professional behavior and it realizes the conflicts
embedded in many of the issues addressed. The Code sets forth three broad areas
of responsibility and provides examples of the kinds of considerations called
for by each. It aims to encourage all professional archaeologists to keep ethical
considerations in mind as they plan and conduct research.
I. Responsibilities to the Archaeological Record
Professional archaeologists incur responsibilities to the archaeological record—the
physical remains and all the associated information about those remains, including those
located under water.
1. Professional archaeologists should adhere to the Guidelines of
the AIA general Code of Ethics concerning illegal antiquities in
their research and publications.
2. The purposes and consequences of all archaeological research should be carefully
considered before the beginning of work. Approaches and methods
should be chosen that require a minimum of damage to the archaeological
record.Although excavation is sometimes the appropriate means of research,
archaeological survey, study of previously excavated material, and other
means should be considered before resort is made to excavation.
3. The recovery and study of archaeological material from all periods should be carried
out only under the supervision of qualified personnel.
4. Archaeologists should anticipate and provide for adequate and accessible long-term
storage and curatorial facilities for all archaeological materials, records, and archives,
including machine-readable data, which require specialized archival care and maintenance.
5. Archaeologists should make public the results of their research in a timely fashion,
making evidence available to others if publication is not accomplished within a
reasonable time.
6. All research projects should contain specific plans for conservation, preservation,
and publication from the very outset, and funds should be secured for such purposes.
II. Responsibilities to the Public
Because the archaeological record represents the heritage of all people, it is the
responsibility of professional archaeologists to communicate with the general public
about the nature of archaeological research and the importance of archaeological resources.
Archaeologists also have specific responsibilities to the local communities where they
carry out research and field work, as well as to their home institutions and communities.
Archaeologists should be sensitive to cultural mores and attitudes, and be aware of the
impact research and fieldwork may have on a local population, both during and after the work.
Such considerations should be taken into account in designing the project’s strategy.
1. Professional archaeologists should be actively engaged in public outreach through lecturing,
popular writing, school programs, and other educational initiatives.
2. Plans for field work should consider the ecological impact of the project and its overall
impact on the local communities.
3. Professional archaeologists should not participate in projects whose primary goal is
private gain.
4. For field projects, archaeologists should consult with appropriate representatives of the
local community during the planning stage, invite local participation in the project, and
regularly inform the local community about the results of the research.
5. Archaeologists should respect the cultural norms and dignity of local inhabitants in
areas where archaeological research is carried out.
6. The legitimate concerns of people who claim descent from, or some other connection with,
cultures of the past must be balanced against the scholarly integrity of the discipline.
A mutually acceptable accommodation should be sought.
III. Responsibilities to Colleagues
Professional archaeologists owe consideration to colleagues, striving at all times
to be fair, never plagiarize, and give credit where due.
1. Archaeologists involved in cooperative projects should strive for harmony and fairness;
those in positions of authority should behave with consideration toward those under
their authority, while all team members should strive to promote the success of the broader
undertaking.
2. The Principal Investigator(s) of archaeological projects should maintain acceptable
standards of safety and ascertain that staff members are adequately insured.
3. Professional archaeologists should maintain confidentiality of information gleaned in
reviewing grant proposals and other such privileged sources.
4. Professional archaeologists should not practice discrimination or harassment based on sex,
religion, age, race, national origin, disability, or sexual orientation; project sponsors should
establish the means to eliminate and/or investigate complaints of discrimination or harassment.
5. Archaeologists should honor reasonable requests from colleagues for access to materials
and records, preserving existing rights to publication, but sharing information useful for the
research of others. Scholars seeking access to unpublished information should not expect to
receive interpretive information if that is also unpublished and in progress.
6. Before studying and/or publishing any unpublished material archaeologists should
secure proper permission, normally in writing, from the appropriate project director or the
appointed representative of the sponsoring institution and/or the antiquities authorities
in the country of origin.
7. Scholars studying material from a particular site should keep the project director
informed of their progress and intentions; project directors should return the courtesy.
8. Members of cooperative projects should prepare and evaluate reports in a timely and
collegial fashion.

