Archaeology may seem an unlikely place for community-based collaborative research to take root but, in fact, it has a rich tradition of public engagement, and in settler-colonial contexts it is being transformed by powerful and insistent demands to decolonize its practice. Bearing in mind the challenge posed by Tuck and Yang – that “decolonization is not a metaphor” – I explore the question of what’s required to do archaeological research in the context of ethical and respectful, community-led partnerships with Indigenous descent communities.
University of British Columbia
Organized by the Human Context of Science and Technology program. Cosponsored by the departments of American Studies; Ancient Studies; Gender, Women’s, + Sexuality Studies; Philosophy; Sociology, Anthropology, and Public Health; and the Center for Social Science Scholarship.
Photo provided by A. Wylie.