ABSTRACT

The collected essays in this volume address contemporary issues regarding the relationship between Indigenous groups and archaeologists, including the challenges of dialogue, colonialism, the difficulties of working within legislative and institutional frameworks, and NAGPRA and similar legislation. The disciplines of archaeology and cultural heritage management are international in scope and many countries continue to experience the impact of colonialism. In response to these common experiences, both archaeology and indigenous political movements involve international networks through which information quickly moves around the globe. This volume reflects these dynamic dialectics between the past and the present and between the international and the local, demonstrating that archaeology is a historical science always linked to contemporary cultural concerns.

chapter 1|32 pages

Maintaining the Dialogue

Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and Indigenous Communities

chapter 3|20 pages

Agency and Archaeological Material Culture

Willing a Suspension of Disbelief?

chapter 4|12 pages

Part of the Conversation

Archaeology and Locality

chapter 5|14 pages

Taíno as a Romantic Term

Notes on the Representation of the Indigenous in Puerto Rican Archaeology and Ethnohistory

chapter 7|28 pages

Working together?

Maori and Archaeologists in Aotearoa/New Zealand Today

chapter 10|16 pages

Archaeology and Indigeneity in aotearoa/New Zealand

Why Do Maori Not Engage with Archaeology?

chapter 11|20 pages

Indigenous archaeology

A Moriori Case Study