AltaMira Press
Pages: 200
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-0258-1 • Hardback • February 2000 • $138.00 • (£106.00)
978-0-7425-0259-8 • Paperback • February 2000 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
978-0-7591-1724-2 • eBook • February 2000 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Thomas F. King has worked in historic preservation since the mid-1960's,as an academic, a contractor and a government official. During 1977-79 he organized historic preservation programs in the islands of Micronesia, and from 1979-88 he oversaw Section 106 review for the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. He holds a Ph.D. in anthropology (emphasis archaeology) from the University of California, Riverside.
Part 1 One: Section 106: What is It and Where Did It Come From?
Chapter 2 1. 106 of What?
Chapter 3 2. Evolution of a Process
Part 4 Two: Section 106 in the New Millennium
Chapter 5 3. What's it All About? When Does it Happen? Who Plays?
Chapter 6 4. The Game's Afoot! Initiating Review
Chapter 7 5. Finding What May be Affected
Chapter 8 6. Evaluation
Chapter 9 7. The Results of Identification and Evaluation
Chapter 10 8. Will There Be an Adverse Affect?
Chapter 11 9. Resolving Adverse Affect
Chapter 12 10. "Substituting" NEPA for Section 106
Chapter 13 11. The Rest of the Regulation
Chapter 14 12. Summary
Part 15 Three: Some Tools of the Trade
Chapter 16 13. Public Participation
Chapter 17 14. Writing a Memorandum of Agreement
Chapter 18 15. The Invented Wheels: Standard Stipulation
Part 19 Epilogue: The Future of 106
Chapter 20 Bibliography
Chapter 21 Appendix A: A Walk Through the ACHP's Archaeological Guidance
Chapter 22 Index
Unique and valuable... the book for all who deal with Section 106 regulations to read and reread.
— Thomas E. Emerson, (Illinois Transportation Archaeology Research Program, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign); Illinois Archaeology
Thomas F. King, a long-standing leader in the ever-growing and transforming field of Cultural Resource Management (CRM), has done a great service to the historic preservation community by writing this book.... Any archaeologist who works in CRM or who is responsible for teaching students about the realities of practicing archaeology in the U.S. today should own this book. AltaMira Press should be congratulated for publishing books like this one in its Heritage Resource Management Series and filling a publication void.
— Michael D. Petraglia; American Antiquity
[King's] analogy between chronic disease and regulatory procedures is funny as well as sharp-edged .... The goal of AltaMira's Heritage series includes producing 'practical guides designed to help those who work in cultural resource management, environmental management, heritage preservation, and related subjects.' This goal has been met by King's contribution.
— Susan R. Martin; Journal Of The Society For Industrial Archaeology
If Historical Preservation Departments across the country realize the importance of King's work, it maybe come the essential supplement to those who would assure employment to thousands of archaeologists, historians, and preservationists. And, if this happens, it may turn the tide in preserving what is important to many Americans. This is a valuable work.
— J. Christopher Schnell, Southeast Missouri State University; Journal of the West, Fall 2002, Vol 41.4
I would recommend King's book to students in academic programs that serve to train the next generation of historic preservation professionals.... Those of us who are professionally involved with historic preservation planning in the United States (and her trust territories that are also subject to the process) will find many, many sections of King's book to be enlightening, provocative, and interesting—and funny to boot! .... King's book, as I have said,is wonderfully insightful.
— Edward L. Bell, Massachusetts Historical Commission; Northeast Historical Archaeology, Vol 29, 2000
[Tom King] very nearly manages to bring what can be a complicated and arcane process into lay terms. Laced with humor, thought-provoking (and sometimes controversial) prose, and simplified examples, Federal Planning and Historic Places should assist anyone who wishes to learn about the 106 process.
— Bill Callahan, State Historic Preservation Office, NSHS; Nebraska History
What makes this book especially valuable is the author. Thomas F. King has been involved in the Section 106 process since its inception, has taught section 106 classes for years, and has probably thought more about the regulation's evolution than any other person alive.
— Darby C. Strapp; High Plains Applied Anthropologist