Résumé
The paper examines efficient post-disaster management of cultural artifacts, emphasizing the need to prioritize object treatment for resource efficiency. It focuses on multi-objective optimization considering heritage value, processing capacities, and resource availability. Highlighting gaps in disaster recovery guidelines and ICT utilization, it proposes using optimization techniques to adapt object routing based on heritage value amidst uncertainties from incomplete data. It suggests queueing theory, job shop, and batch-processing optimizations for object recovery processes. The research underscores the significance of optimizing the stabilization phase during recovery, presenting a model for prioritizing objects based on heritage value and damage. It seeks to allocate rescue budgets to objects, optimizing their stabilization within budget constraints to maximize salvage impact.