Topics & Issues
Race in Archaeology
Order By: Title | Source Type
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“Power to the People”: Sociopolitics and the Archaeology of Black Americans
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#TulsaSyllabis (The Rise, Destruction, and Rebuilding of Tulsa’s Greenwood District)
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Archaeology and Racialization
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Archaeology under the Blinding Light of Race
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Concepts of community in the pursuit of an inclusive archaeology
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Council for British Archaeology Equality and Diversity Hub
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Cultural heritage beyond Culturalism
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Dismantling Archaeology: Challenging Ourselves, Our Ethics, and Our Priorities
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Equity (Issues) for All, Historical Archaeology as a Profession in the 21st Century
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From “Public Archaeologist” to “Public Intellectual”: Seeking Engagement Opportunities Outside Traditional Archaeological Arenas
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Historic Black Lives Matter: Archaeology as Activism in the 21st Century
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Indigenous Archaeology
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Interview with the Society of Black Archaeologists
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Is it an archaeologist's job to educate racist construction crews? (Succinct Research Blog)
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La discusión ética en arqueología e historia sobre los bienes culturales de pueblos originarios
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Manifestos and the Manly Future of Archaeological Theory
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Memory, Monuments, and Confederate Things: Contesting the 21st-Century Confederacy
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Non-Metric Cranial Differentiation Between Asian and Native American Populations for Ancestry Assessment
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Plains Anthropological Society Harassment Policy
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Politics, Nationalism, and Archaeology
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Practicing Anthropology: Ethics, Theory, and Engagement
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Race, Sex and Evolution
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Seizing Intellectual Power: The dialogue at the New York African burial ground
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The 2020 Race Uprisings and Archaeology’s Response
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The archaeology of identity: Approaches to gender, age, status, ethnicity and religion
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The Future is Now: Archaeology and the Eradication of Anti-Blackness
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The Grand Challenges for Archaeology: A Blogging Carnival
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The Morality of Property and Cultural Patrimony
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The New York African Burial Ground Project: Past biases, current dilemmas and future research opportunities
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Toward “True Acts of Inclusion”: The “Here” and the “Out There” Concepts in Public Archaeology
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Why the Whiteness of Archaeology Is a Problem