Home > Environmental


Traditional Cultural Property Expert


The U.S. National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) classifies its listings by various types of properties.  The 1992 amendments to the NHPA allowed for a new designation of property type, that of the traditional cultural property (TCP). The amendments established that properties affiliated with traditional religious and cultural importance to a Native American tribe or Native Hawaiian group were eligible for the National Register.

The traditional cultural property expert specializes in working with these groups on sacred sites, natural resource collection areas and the occasional archaeological site associated with ancestral Native American groups.

Listed properties generally fall into one of five categories, though there are special considerations for other types of properties which do not fit into these five broad categories or fit into more specialized subcategories. The five general categories for NRHP properties are: building, structure, object, site, and district. In addition, historic districts consist of contributing and non-contributing properties. Historic districts possess a concentration, linkage or continuity of the other four types of properties. Objects, structures, buildings and sites within a historic district are united historically or aesthetically, either by choice or by the nature of their development.

Buildings, as defined by the National Register, are distinguished in the traditional sense. Examples include a house, barn, hotel, church or similar construction. They are created primarily to shelter human activity. The term building, as in outbuilding, can be used to refer to historically and functionally related units, such as a courthouse and a jail or a barn and a house.

We are the leaders recruiting traditional cultural property experts. 

Sequence has been a leader on behalf of its clients recruiting and staffing traditional cultural property experts.  We certainly know and understand the technical and professional nuances of this vocation, which is important because our professional recruiters know the vital role traditional cultural property experts can have in the environmental, construction, and light industrial industries.

After all we are the premier executive recruiting and staffing firm committed to providing employment solutions to these major industries throughout the globe.  Our team of highly skilled, experienced recruiters and staffing professionals has broad environmental industry experience.  They know the leading professionals in the environmental and traditional cultural property experts’ fields. 

With this expansive industry network, they know where the finest talent is and how to obtain the best and the brightest personnel for your organization.  Our recruiting philosophy, methodology and recruiting practices adhere to the highest standards and ethics in the industry.  It is why we are able to carefully screen and present only the most qualified traditional cultural property expert candidates who are highly capable of making a significant difference in your organization. 

You can rely on Sequence’s full menu of HR services.

Sequence can meet all of your personnel needs, from filling individual traditional cultural property expert jobs to recruiting and staffing entire practice groups, for both small firms or for large organizations all over the world. 

We recruit and staff executive, management, administrative and field-level personnel for temporary and temporary-to-permanent traditional cultural property expert jobs, and for direct-hire positions throughout the environmental field worldwide.  We also offer short and long-term temporary contract placements, outplacement services, long-term recruiting in addition to contracting a full range of HR services. 

With such a diversity of applications, there is a nearly endless list of environmental sub-specialties with which Sequence has experience. Many of these specialties are vital to the clients we serve and require the highly skilled expertise in recruiting and staffing that Sequence provides. 

Links:

• Guidelines for Evaluating and Documenting TCPs
• National Register of Historic Places