Bibliographic Information
Course Title
Indigenous Archaeologies
Author(s)
Randall McGuire
Institution Where Taught
Binghamton University
Semester or Date Taught
Spring 2017
Web Address (URL)
Additional Information
Course Number
ANTH 554M
Course Level
Course Description
This graduate seminar introduces the student to the growing international movement for an Indigenous archaeology. Indigenous archaeology is archaeology informed by Indigenous values and agendas. It is archaeology conducted by and for Indigenous people. I require Graduate standing for the course but no prior course work in archaeology is necessary. I will assume that each student has a basic grounding in Anthropology. The course will prepare graduate students in archaeology to incorporate Indigenous archaeology into their practice. It will give students in the other three sub disciplines of anthropology an introduction to archaeological research and it will address a variety of concerns about Indigenous peoples that cross cut the sub-disciplines. The course is principally intended for graduate students in anthropology. The course counts towards the sub-field distribution requirement for graduate students in Socio-Cultural Anthropology, Biological Anthropology and Linguistics. There are four key facets to the praxis of Indigenous archaeology. First, Indigenous archaeology serves the interests of Indigenous communities. Second, the method of working with these communities is collaboration. Third, collaboration requires that many voices be heard. And finally that archaeology should be of use to indigenous peoples. This course will focus on the development of Indigenous archaeology in the United States and link those developments to the international scene. It will begin with a review of the legal, economic, cultural and political realities of Native Americans in the United States today. Based on this review, the course will consider the how these realities have shaped relations between archaeologists and indigenous communities. Repatriation will be a major topic of the course.
Syllabus Available
Yes
Notes
The PDF above is made available on Dr. McGuire's webpage:
http://bingweb.binghamton.edu/~rmcguire/Teaching.html
A PDF version of this syllabus isalso available through the Society for American Archaeology's webpage for "Syllabi: Ethics and Archaeology." Please contact instructor for further information.
Taxonomies
RPA Codes & Standards
- Adequate Preparation for Research Projects
- Archaeologist's Responsibility to Colleagues, Employees, and Students
- Archaeologist's Responsibility to the Public
- Integrity of Research Methodology
CIfA Codes
- Principle 1: Adherence to ethical and responsible behaviour in archaeological affairs
- Principle 3: Responsibility for acquiring and recording reliable information of the past in archaeological research
Keywords & Terms
- Accountability
- Burials and Human Remains
- Consultation/Partnership with Indigenous Peoples
- Indigenous, Tribal, Aboriginal Rights
- Integrity of Research Methodology and Field Procedures
- Local, State, Federal, and Tribal Laws
- Public Interest, Collaboration, Education, and Outreach
- Repatriation
- Respect for and Responsibility to Affected Groups
- Standards of Data Collection, Recordation, Analysis
Topics & Issues
- Collaboration in Archaeology (i.e. Communities, Non-Archaeologists, etc.)
- Descendant, Resident, and Stakeholder Communities
- Ethical Responsibilities of Archaeologists
- Human Rights and Social and Economic Inequalities
- Indigenous Archaeology: Perspectives and Issues
- Interpreting the Past
- NAGPRA, Repatriation, and Indigenous Rights
- Politics and Archaeology