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The Ethics of Trusteeship and the Biography of Objects
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2016
Abstract
Museum codes of ethics stress the importance of preservation, knowledge and access, but they remain silent on the justificatory framework of the duty of care museums have to the objects in their collections and on museums' obligations towards their public. In this essay I propose a triangular framework for understanding the duty of care museums have, according to which it is shaped by the need to negotiate an object's transit from past to future in such a way as to secure that object's future significance. The account provided of transit to the future is underwritten by a model of trust as entrusting. Hence, museums' duty to care for the objects in their collections is found to be grounded on the demands of the trust relationship, complemented by the respect that is necessary for effective negotiation of the transit from past to future.
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- Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements , Volume 79: Philosophy and Museums: Essays in the Philosophy of Museums , October 2016 , pp. 179 - 197
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 2016
References
1 My critique refers to the ICOM Code for Ethics of Museums, which I take to have a universal application. From now on whenever I mention the museum code of ethics or codes of museum ethics I refer to the set of principles and rules introduced by ICOM. See: http://icom.museum/fileadmin/user_upload/pdf/Codes/code_ethics2013_eng.pdf.
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13 It is worth noting here that trusteeship as a model of museum governance is prominent in both the United Kingdom and the United States. For instance, both the British Museum and the Smithsonian Institution are managed by a board of trustees. Museums in continental Europe do not tend to follow the model of trusteeship because the idea of equitable trusts is rooted in Anglo-Saxon law and not in Roman law, which dominates the lawmaking institutions of continental Europe. Outside the UK and USA national museums and antiquities authorities are run as government agencies under the control of the ministers. Greece and India are good examples here. However, there are exceptions: for instance, the Rembrandt House Museum in Amsterdam is governed by trustees.
14 This material is quoted, with the author's permission, from an unpublished earlier version of Williams, J., ‘Parliaments, Museums, Trustees, and the Provision of Public Benefit in the Eighteenth-Century British Atlantic World’, Huntington Library Quarterly 76 (2013), 195–214 Google Scholar.
15 Ibid.
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19 Philosophers have proposed different accounts of trust. Some accounts defend the idea that trust can be explained as a form of rational choice theory. Advocates of this type of account claim that when A trusts B with C, A hands over A's interests in C to B, and B takes care of C because B has A's interests at heart. See Russell, H., Trust (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2006)Google ScholarPubMed. K. Jones suggests an alternative account, according to which to trust someone is to express an affective attitude. For Jones, A trusts B with C, because A believes that B is trustworthy. What matters for this account is that B's motives be trustworthy. See Jones, K., ‘Trust as an Affective Attitude’, Ethics 107 (1996), 4–25 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. A. Baier argues that trust depends on the exercise of good will. A trusts B with C and B takes care of C by exercising B's good will. See Baier, A., ‘Trust and Anti-Trust’, Ethics 96 (1986), 231–260 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Advocates of each of these accounts agree that trust can be understood in terms of a tripartite relationship, but they differ in the significance they accord to different poles of the relationship. My concern here is not to explore these accounts of trust but to show how trust contributes to the ethics of museum trusteeship.
20 See MacGregor, N., A History of the World in 100 Objects (London: Allen Lane, 2010)Google Scholar.
21 Annette Baier examines how we understand trust and its opposite in the course of arguing for the place of women in the application of ethical concepts. See Baier, ‘Trust and Anti-Trust’, op. cit. Although Baier's analysis is compelling, she does not apply it within a practical account of trusteeship. Nonetheless, her understanding of trust as entrusting has significant implications for our understanding of museums’ duty of care.
22 Ibid., 235–237.
23 I. Kopytoff, ‘The Cultural Biography of Things: Commoditization as Process’, op. cit.
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26 The topic of narrative understanding merits further exploration. Here, however, my aim is not to focus on narrative understanding but to illuminate the role that the narrative context of the biography of objects plays in understanding museum trusteeship. See Velleman, J. D., ‘Narrative Explanation’, The Philosophical Review 112 (2003), 1–25 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
27 Dillon, R.S., ‘Respect and Care: Toward Moral Integration’, Canadian Journal of Philosophy 22 (1992), 105–132 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
28 According to Lowenthal, the idea that underpins our understanding of the ethical role of trusteeship with regard to heritage objects is rooted in the medieval European conception of family duty. See Lowenthal, D., Possessed by the Past: The Heritage Crusade and the Spoils of History (New York: The Free Press, 1996)Google Scholar.
29 MacGregor, A History of the World in 100 Objects, op. cit., chapter 89.
30 To find out how Aboriginals understand their own encounter with Captain Cook and their perception of the Bark Shield see Nugent, M., Cook Was Here (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009)Google Scholar.
31 I would like to thank Jonathan Williams for his insightful comments and long debates on museum trusteeship, Ivan Gaskell for his advice on the museum governance, and Eleanor Chatburn, Ian Kidd, Jenny Newell and Geoffrey Scarre for their comments on an earlier draft of this paper. I would also like to thank the organizers of ‘Philosophy and Museums: Ethics, Aesthetics and Ontology’ conference for accepting my paper and giving me the chance to present an earlier version of this paper.
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