Repatriation Reader: Who Owns American Indian Remains?Devon Abbott Mihesuah University of Nebraska Press, 2000 - 335 pages In the past decade the repatriation of Native American skeletal remains and funerary objects has become a lightning rod for radically opposing views about cultural patrimony and the relationship between Native communities and archaeologists. In this unprecedented volume, Native Americans and non-Native Americans within and beyond the academic community offer their views on repatriation and the ethical, political, legal, cultural, scholarly, and economic dimensions of this hotly debated issue. While historians and archaeologists debate continuing non-Native interests and obligations, Native American scholars speak to the key cultural issues embedded in their ancestral pasts. A variety of sometimes explosive case studies are considered, ranging from Kennewick Man to the repatriation of Zuni Ahayu: da. Also featured is a detailed discussion of the background, meaning, and applicability of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, as well as the text of the act itself. |
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Page 134
... Indian graves , expropriate Indian dead from ceded lands , or divest a tribe ... tribes also relinquished their right to protect tribal dead buried in the ... Indian lands in order to desecrate Indian graves and obtain dead bodies at ...
... Indian graves , expropriate Indian dead from ceded lands , or divest a tribe ... tribes also relinquished their right to protect tribal dead buried in the ... Indian lands in order to desecrate Indian graves and obtain dead bodies at ...
Page 140
... tribes and people , specifically stating that it “ reflects the unique rela- tionship between the Federal Government and Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations . " 129 The trust responsibility of the federal govern- ment to Indian ...
... tribes and people , specifically stating that it “ reflects the unique rela- tionship between the Federal Government and Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations . " 129 The trust responsibility of the federal govern- ment to Indian ...
Page 148
... tribes , NAGPRA contemplates that the statutorily - created Review Committee may serve as a mediator of the dispute , and that agreements between ... Indian tribe or the Native Hawaiian organization certifies that 148 Trope and Echo - Hawk.
... tribes , NAGPRA contemplates that the statutorily - created Review Committee may serve as a mediator of the dispute , and that agreements between ... Indian tribe or the Native Hawaiian organization certifies that 148 Trope and Echo - Hawk.
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Representations of Indian Bodies in NineteenthCentury | 19 |
Reflections on the Cultural Background | 37 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
agency or museum Ahayu:da Alert Bay American Graves Protection American Indian ancestors archae archaeologists Arizona artifacts associated funerary objects beliefs Bieder body bones burial civil religion claim collection collectors committee concerns Cong cultural affiliation cultural items cultural patrimony dead Echo-Hawk ethics excavation federal agencies groups Hopi Hopi Tribe human remains Indian remains Indian tribes indigenous individuals Kennewick Kintigh Kwakiutl legislation looters Meighan NAGPRA National Museum Native American Native American Graves Native American human Native Hawaiian organization negotiations ologists Oregonian past Pawnee phrenology physical anthropologists political pothunters Potlatch prehistoric Press Protection and Repatriation Pueblo of Zuni reburial religion Religious Freedom remains and associated remains and funerary Repatriation Act repatriation movement request sacred objects scientific skeletal remains Smithsonian Institution Society supra note 108 Texas tion traditional tribe or Native University Zuni Pueblo Zuni Tribal Council Zuni Tribe