Collaboration in Archaeological Practice: Engaging Descendant Communities

By: COLWELL-CHANTHAPHONH, ChipContributor(s): FERGUSON, T. JMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Archaeology in Society SeriesPublication details: Lanham, MD Altamira Press 2008 Edition: 1stISBN: 9780000000000Subject(s): Antiquities--Collection and preservation--Social aspects | Archaeologists--Professional ethics | Archaeology--Moral and ethical aspects | Archaeology--Social aspects | Indigenous peoples--Antiquities | Intercultural communication | Social archaeology
Contents:
Chapter 1 Foreword Chapter 2 The Collaborative Continuum Chapter 3 Navigating the Fluidity of Social Identity: Collaborative Research into Cultural Affiliation in the American Southwest Chapter 4 Unusual of "Extreme" Beliefs About the Past: Community Identity and Dealing with the Fringe Chapter 5 Things Are Not Always What They Seem: Indigenous Knowledge and Pattern Recognition in Archaeological Analysis Chapter 6 Not the End, Not the Middle, But the Beginning: Repatriation as a Transformative Mechanism for Archaeologists and Indigenous Peoples Chapter 7 Heritage Ethics and Descendant Communities Chapter 8 Collaboration Means Equality, Respect, and Reciprocity: A Conversation About Archaeology and the Hopi Tribe Chapter 9 The Ethics of Collaboration: Whose Culture? Whose Intellectual Property? Who Benefits? Chapter 10 New Africa: Understanding the Americanization of African Descent Groups Through Archaeology Chapter 11 "I Wish for Paradise": Memory and Class in Hampden, Baltimore Chapter 12 Entering the Agora: Archaeology, Conservation, and Indigenous Peoples in the Amazon Chapter 13 Collaborative Encounters
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books The BIAA David H. French Library
Shelf 66 - Reading Room
G2f COLWE 32041 Not for loan BOOKS-000000024922

Chapter 1 Foreword Chapter 2 The Collaborative Continuum Chapter 3 Navigating the Fluidity of Social Identity: Collaborative Research into Cultural Affiliation in the American Southwest Chapter 4 Unusual of "Extreme" Beliefs About the Past: Community Identity and Dealing with the Fringe Chapter 5 Things Are Not Always What They Seem: Indigenous Knowledge and Pattern Recognition in Archaeological Analysis Chapter 6 Not the End, Not the Middle, But the Beginning: Repatriation as a Transformative Mechanism for Archaeologists and Indigenous Peoples Chapter 7 Heritage Ethics and Descendant Communities Chapter 8 Collaboration Means Equality, Respect, and Reciprocity: A Conversation About Archaeology and the Hopi Tribe Chapter 9 The Ethics of Collaboration: Whose Culture? Whose Intellectual Property? Who Benefits? Chapter 10 New Africa: Understanding the Americanization of African Descent Groups Through Archaeology Chapter 11 "I Wish for Paradise": Memory and Class in Hampden, Baltimore Chapter 12 Entering the Agora: Archaeology, Conservation, and Indigenous Peoples in the Amazon Chapter 13 Collaborative Encounters