Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative / / Ray Jureidini.

Ceramics are among the most abundant materials recovered in archaeological sites. Traditionally, they have served as the main staple for archaeologists to establish chronological sequences within sites and cultural affiliations between sites. They are also a primary source for a wealth of informatio...

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Superior document:UCL Qatar Series in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:Dawḥah, Qatar : : Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing,, 2014.
Year of Publication:2014
Language:English
Series:UCL Qatar Series in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
Physical Description:1 online resource (137 pages)
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spelling Jureidini, Ray, author.
Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative / Ray Jureidini.
Hamad Bin Khalifa University Press 2014
Dawḥah, Qatar : Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing, 2014.
1 online resource (137 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
UCL Qatar Series in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
Description based on: online resource; title from pdf title page (QSCIENCE.com, viewed May 4, 2016).
Ceramics are among the most abundant materials recovered in archaeological sites. Traditionally, they have served as the main staple for archaeologists to establish chronological sequences within sites and cultural affiliations between sites. They are also a primary source for a wealth of information about past economies, social structures and ritual behaviour. In addition, ceramics preserve in their bodies the traces of countless forms of experimentation, knowledge transmission, technical ingenuity and artistic sensitivity, transcending the boundaries between art, craft and science both in their original production, and in their current study. As a sustained area of research, the study of ceramics has historically served as a prime arena for innovation, both through the pioneer application of instrumental analyses and as a core foundation and testing ground for influential archaeological theories. Inevitably, some research methods are well-established in some regions, whereas they are still emerging in others. Also the integration between science-based approaches and archaeological theory is uneven. However, emerging academic traditions, and those in less-resourced regions, should not be overshadowed by the more established paradigms. While it is impossible to keep up with all the work carried out on archaeological ceramics worldwide, it is essential that researchers continue to exchange and compare their methods, results and ideas, and that these are made available to a broader archaeological readership. This book aims to facilitate this exchange and update of information on diverse approaches to archaeological ceramics across much of the world.
English
Migrant labor Qatar.
Qatar Emigration and immigration.
Ancient Ceramics
9927-101-75-9
language English
format eBook
author Jureidini, Ray,
spellingShingle Jureidini, Ray,
Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative /
UCL Qatar Series in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
author_facet Jureidini, Ray,
author_variant r j rj
author_role VerfasserIn
author_sort Jureidini, Ray,
title Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative /
title_sub report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative /
title_full Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative / Ray Jureidini.
title_fullStr Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative / Ray Jureidini.
title_full_unstemmed Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative / Ray Jureidini.
title_auth Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar : report for Qatar Foundation Migrant Worker Welfare Initiative /
title_new Migrant labour recruitment to Qatar :
title_sort migrant labour recruitment to qatar : report for qatar foundation migrant worker welfare initiative /
series UCL Qatar Series in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
series2 UCL Qatar Series in Archaeology and Cultural Heritage
publisher Hamad Bin Khalifa University Press
Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing,
publishDate 2014
physical 1 online resource (137 pages)
isbn 9927-101-75-9
callnumber-first H - Social Science
callnumber-subject HD - Industries, Land Use, Labor
callnumber-label HD5856
callnumber-sort HD 45856 Q2
geographic Qatar Emigration and immigration.
geographic_facet Qatar.
Qatar
illustrated Not Illustrated
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