Sociological Investigation of the Alignment of Linguistic and Cultural Values of Environmentalists with International Environmental Protection Agreements: With an Emphasis in English Language

Document Type : Research Article

Authors

1 Department of Design and National Arts, Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Russia

2 Department of "Constructive and design", Kazan Federal University, Kazan, Russia

Abstract

When conservation emerged in the 20th century, it was conventionally understood to be a scientific discipline in which conservators used their technical expertise to preserve linguistic and cultural artifacts. One way to look at codes of ethics and language is as a way to reflect on the shared values that are fundamental to the field. On the other hand, a logical scientific method founded on data, analysis, and hard facts is used to apply ethics and language in conservation practice. The dual character of conservation ethics continues to be the defining paradigm and serves as the foundation for evidence-based practice. Both the scientific foundation and the ethical foundation for this profession, as defined by ethical codes, are founded on a logical methodology. This article looks at the findings of a sociological survey that was given to conservators in various professional categories and experience levels who work in conservation laboratories. The analysis demonstrated that their values are consistent with the principal international conservation agreements, even in the face of differences in age, experience, and expert categories.

Keywords


Volume 14, Issue 3
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Research in Applied Linguistics (ICRAL 2023), October 30, 2023, Kazan, Russia
October 2023
Pages 492-496