Kaogu

Kaogu (Chinese: 考古; lit.: 'Archaeology') is a peer-reviewed monthly academic journal of Chinese archaeology, published by the Institute of Archaeology of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.[1]

Kaogu
Disciplinearchaeology
LanguageChinese
Publication details
Former name(s)
Kaogu Tongxun, 考古通讯
Publisher
Frequencymonthly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Kaogu
Indexing
ISSN0453-2899
Links

History

The predecessor to what would become Kaogu was published from 1934-1937, with each issue containing only a couple of articles.[2] The earliest version of the journal was published in 1955,[3] however it appeared irregularly until 1959. Regular publication was temporarily suspended between 1966–1971, during the Cultural Revolution.[2]

Content

The journal publishes summarized descriptions of excavations across China, but more recently research articles have also been included. Following cultural heritage laws, the work of foreigners on China must first be published in Chinese, and so Kaogu is also the main repository of data on international joint research between Chinese and non-Chinese that intensified in the 1990s. Most articles contain short English summaries.

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gollark: It also seems to function as a plausibly deniable way to ban end to end encryption (it never mentions it explicitly but does have a mechanism to force technology companies to make their service amenable to centralised monitoring).
gollark: The UK government is also working on the incredibly ææææ "online safety bill", which obliges online things to ban "harmful content" (not illegal, "harmful").
gollark: I do know about this.
gollark: It doesn't help that various governments and such also seem to not want anonymous online communications.

References

  1. "Introduction of the Institute of Archaeology, CASS". Institute of Archaeology, CASS. 2005-04-28.
  2. "《Archaeology》 Publishing report". China Academic Journals Full-text Database. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  3. "Archaeology". China Academic Journals Full-text Database. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  • Barnes, Gina L. China, Korea, and Japan: The Rise of Civilization in East Asia. Thames and Hudson, London, 1993.


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