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Archaeological Practices, Knowledge Work and Digitalisation

Author
Isto Huvila
Jeremy Huggett
Abstract
Defining what constitute archaeological practices is a prerequisite for understanding where and how archaeological and archaeologically relevant information and knowledge are made, what counts as archaeological information, and where the limits are situated. The aim of this position paper, developed as a part of the COST action Archaeological practices and knowledge work in the digital environment (www.arkwork.eu), is to highlight the need for at least a relative consensus on the extents of archaeological practices in order to be able to understand and develop archaeological practices and knowledge work in the contemporary digital context. The text discusses approaches to study archaeological practices and knowledge work including Nicolinis notions of zooming in and zooming out, and proposes that a distinction between archaeological and archaeology-related practices could provide a way to negotiate the archaeologicality of diverse practices.
Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of Computer Applications in Archaeology
Volume
1
Number of Pages
88–100
URL
https://doi.org/10.5334/jcaa.6
DOI
10.5334/jcaa.6
Refereed Designation
Refereed
Taxonomy terms
archaeology
archaeological practices
costarkwork
practices
knowledge work
information work
Keywords
archaeological practices
practices
knowledge work
information work
digital practices
digital tools
technology
File attachment
Huvila2018e.pdf (1.2 MB)
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Forthcoming presentations

  • Keynote at Digital Heritage Summit 2026
  • Information practices are environmental
  • Session: Archaeological data work: Interdisciplinary perspectives to interdisciplinary practices
  • Tracing interdisciplinarities of archaeological data work: identifying and turning evidence visible

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Isto Huvila

(né Isto Vatanen)  
Professor in  
Information Studies  
Department of ALM  
Uppsala University

Docent (adjunct professor) in information management  
Information studies  
Ã…bo Akademi University

Isto Huvila is working on management and organisation of what we know and how we know in contexts ranging from social media to more traditional arenas of learning and working. My special areas of expertise are organisational information, social media, health, archives, libraries, museums and cultural heritage.

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