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Ethics, Standards, and Professional Practices <br />AAM Code of Ethics for Museums <br />Adopted 1993 by the AAM Board of Directors and amended in 2000 <br />https://www.aam-us.org/programs/ethics-standards-and-professional-practices/code-of- <br />ethics-for-museums / <br />Please note that the Code of Ethics for Museums references the American Association <br />of Museums (AAM), now called the American Alliance of Museums. <br />Ethical codes evolve in response to changing conditions, values and ideas. A professional <br />code of ethics must, therefore, be periodically updated. It must also rest upon widely <br />shared values. Although the operating environment of museums grows more complex each <br />year, the root value for museums, the tie that connects all of us together despite our <br />diversity, is the commitment to serving people, both present and future generations. This <br />value guided the creation of and remains the most fundamental principle in the following <br />Code of Ethics for Museums. <br />Code of Ethics for Museums <br />Museums make their unique contribution to the public by collecting, preserving and <br />interpreting the things of this world. Historically, they have owned and used natural <br />objects, living and nonliving, and all manner of human artifacts to advance knowledge and <br />nourish the human spirit. Today, the range of their special interests reflects the scope of <br />human vision. Their missions include collecting and preserving, as well as exhibiting and <br />educating with materials not only owned but also borrowed and fabricated for these ends. <br />Their numbers include both governmental and private museums of anthropology, art <br />history and natural history, aquariums, arboreta, art centers, botanical gardens, children's <br />museums, historic sites, nature centers, planetariums, science and technology centers, and <br />zoos. The museum universe in the United States includes both collecting and non -collecting <br />institutions. Although diverse in their missions, they have in common their nonprofit form <br />of organization and a commitment of service to the public. Their collections and/or the <br />objects they borrow or fabricate are the basis for research, exhibits, and programs that <br />invite public participation. <br />Taken as a whole, museum collections and exhibition materials represent the world's <br />natural and cultural common wealth. As stewards of that wealth, museums are compelled <br />to advance an understanding of all natural forms and of the human experience. It is <br />incumbent on museums to be resources for humankind and in all their activities to foster <br />an informed appreciation of the rich and diverse world we have inherited. It is also <br />incumbent upon them to preserve that inheritance for posterity. <br />