Repatriation Has Transformed, Not Ended, Research - Giving artifacts to their owners' descendants doesn't hurt research.

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In 1996, the discovery of a skull on the banks of the Columbia River in Kennewick, Washington, sparked an intense controversy and a yearslong court case.

The remains belonged to an individual—dubbed “Kennewick Man” or “the Ancient One”—who lived between 8,340 and 9,200 years ago. Within months, the Army Corps of Engineers, which had jurisdiction over the remains, announced that they planned to return the bones to five Native American tribes who claimed the Ancient One as their Ancestor. In response, a team of eight scientists launched a lawsuit claiming their right to study the remains.

The ensuing conflict climaxed in 2015, when a DNA study performed in collaboration with the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation confirmed the tribes’ position by providing a strong link to Native American groups. The U.S. Congress acknowledged years of political advocacy by the tribes and soon passed a law for the Ancient One’s transfer to the Washington State Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation. The Ancient One was reburied in 2017, more than 20 years after his initial discovery.

The trial and the Ancient One became famous. It’s easy to see why. For the media, it was a good story: a lengthy and high-profile legal battle with many actors. At the time, few individuals dating to that period had been found, so the Ancient One was potentially very important for understanding the peopling of the Americas. The debates emphasized the conflicting interests of science, politics, and religion.

Two men with long braids and beaded necklaces pray.
In 2000, Albert Andrews-Redstar, right, and Horace Axtell, left, take part in a prayer song at the end of a news conference seeking the Ancient One’s repatriation. Jackie Johnston/AP Photo



But the extensive notoriety afforded to this case, and others like it, negatively impacted both academic and public impressions of repatriation—the return of ancestral remains and other cultural patrimony to descendant groups from institutions like museums and universities. Such controversial cases often overshadow more collaborative repatriation work and promote the idea that repatriation is always incompatible with scientific research.

This myth persists today. It is often why institutions continue to resist repatriation. For example, the 2020 book Repatriation and Erasing the Past argues that repatriation has harmed science and threatens to end certain types of archaeological research. It garnered significant backlash online, including a petition for the book’s retraction.

It is true that not all descendant communities are interested in pursuing archaeological and anthropological research. For many, their Ancestors’ very presence in institutional collections is evidence of traumatic histories and colonial violence. Repatriation, even when mandated by legislation or policy, also faces continued resistance and, for some, remains out of reach.

Our aim is not to convince descendants that research is important. Instead, as settler anthropologists, we are pushing back against the institutional narratives that see repatriation as incompatible with research. We are countering the notions that collaborative work is “non-scientific,” “biased,” or even an imposition on academic freedom.

Frankly, these arguments too often dismiss the important transformations that repatriation has brought to research practices and the many successful collaborative projects that have developed. Indigenous scientists and community-based researchers are leading the way. Our recent edited volume, Working With and For Ancestors, shows how research of all kinds—from oral history work to DNA analysis—has featured prominently in many repatriation cases where researchers sought to work with and for descendant communities.

Research involving Ancestors can certainly take place alongside repatriation. But for that to work, respectful relationships between institutions and descendant communities must be developed and maintained, the wishes of community partners need to be prioritized, and community control over the disposition of their Ancestors must be respected. This may not always be easy, but it is always worthwhile.


The same year the Ancient One was found in Washington, an Ancestor known as Shuká Káa (“The Man Ahead of Us”) was found on Prince of Wales Island in Alaska. Shuká Káa was another important individual for our understanding of the past; however, his story would follow a very different path.

Within 24 hours, archaeologists had contacted local tribal governments to inform them of the discovery and to request permission to study their Ancestor. After consultation and negotiation, the tribal governments agreed to the scientific investigation of Shuká Káa, including DNA analysis (which involves removing a portion of a tooth or bone), so long as the community continued to be closely involved in the research.

Initial studies did not reveal a clear link between Shuká Káa and DNA samples taken from 200 Tlingit community members. Shuká Káa was repatriated and reburied close to where he was found in 2008. However, with the community’s consent, a small sample of dental tissue was retained for later re-analysis. In 2017, a new study found that Shuká Káa was likely a distant Ancestor of contemporary Indigenous groups in the Pacific Northwest, including the Tlingit.

A slate-gray headstone dedicated to Shuká Káa sits in the back of a car.
Sealaska Heritage Institute commissioned a headstone for Shuká Káa and placed it on the reburial site in September 2008 along with a bentwood box carved by Jonathan Rowan Jr., of Klawock, Alaska. Terence Fifield



What was different in the case of Shuká Káa compared to the lengthy controversy surrounding the Ancient One?

Comparing them shows that two essential components of mutually beneficial research partnerships were present in the case of Shuká Káa: respect for the wishes of the descendant community and a collaborative approach to research. Archaeologists also had a preexisting working relationship with the local tribal governments, and repatriation was always the end goal.

Collaborative relationships such as these can and do result in compelling research, while also respecting community wishes for repatriation and reburial. But truly collaborative research is complicated and hard to do. Luckily, there are many other examples of researchers and community partners working together in a good way to help show us the way forward.

Take, for example, the shíshálh Archaeological Research Project (sARP). This is a long-term partnership between the shíshálh Nation, the University of Saskatchewan, and the University of Toronto. In 2017, the sARP team worked with the Canadian Museum of History (CMH) to digitally reconstruct the faces of five Ancestors based on their skeletal remains. Community partners gave feedback on appropriate facial expressions, hair styles, and clothing for the Ancestors’ images before they were reburied. This project resulted in scholarly publications, and the reconstructions are now on display both at the CMH and the local tems swiya Museum.

Similarly, at the Manitoba Museum, researchers have worked with Indigenous communities to learn more about Ancestors when they are uncovered by accident or through archaeological work. In these cases, the Elders in these communities take the view that their Ancestors reveal themselves so future generations can learn from and about them. The museum partners with communities to examine and investigate the ancestral remains and any associated belongings, then they collaboratively produce local exhibits and plain-language books that braid together Indigenous Traditional Knowledge with the archaeological and anthropological findings to tell the Ancestors’ stories.

If a community is open to considering anthropological research, consulting scientists have a responsibility to be transparent about all available analytical options and any potential risks.

For example, at the onset of the Journey Home Project in 2006, anthropologists from the University of British Columbia met with Stó:lō Nation community members to hear what they wanted to learn about their Ancestors before they were returned. Researchers came to the next meeting with information on the different methods that might be able to answer those questions. Scientists were open and honest about the possibilities, the processes and samples required, and the limitations of the analyses. It was important to communicate, for example, that the DNA analysis process consumes a small sample of tooth or bone.

Researchers must also be mindful that while they may have been trained to think in terms of specimens and samples, communities think in terms of relatives. Ancestors need to be treated with respect, and appropriate cultural protocols must be followed. This is something museums around the world are integrating into their practice. For example, institutions like the Royal BC Museum in Canada and Te Papa Tongarewa in New Zealand are working directly with descendants to ensure that Ancestors are properly cared for. This includes building spaces like Keeping Places that can allow for ceremonial caretaking and, where appropriate, research before Ancestors are reburied.


In 2018, a delegation from the U.S. Embassy participated in a repatriation ceremony at New Zealand’s national museum, Te Papa Tongarewa, bringing home remains of 17 Maori and Moriori. U.S. Embassy/Flickr



Finally (and most importantly), entering a collaborative research relationship means that community partners share control of the project. If a partner chooses to opt out of any aspect of the proposed research, their wishes must be respected. For instance, co-author Katherine has been working collaboratively with Sioux Valley Dakota Nation (SVDN) since 2012 to investigate cemeteries at the Brandon Indian Residential School in Manitoba. Recently, SVDN and university partners put the examination of potential unmarked graves—a key goal of the project—on hold while they reach out to other affected communities. These consultations are important to identify the right way forward.

When it comes to research that involves Ancestors, working in a good way is more important than working quickly.

What these and other examples show us is that repatriation did not end research involving Ancestors. What has ended is the “business-as-usual” approach.

Working collaboratively requires researchers to seriously rethink their understandings of research ownership and control. Communities must be equal partners in the creation, implementation, and dissemination of research projects. This can be difficult—partner communities often have very different goals and ways of thinking from Western-trained scientists—but drawing on multiple lines of evidence actually leads to stronger science.

Collaboration is not new to scientific research—partnerships and team-based projects have a long history in the academy. The only new things are who scientists are collaborating with, and that these new collaborations require us to deliberately shift power to ensure that voices so long excluded are now heard and respected.

This is not to say that everyone will choose to pursue research. In many places, repatriation work continues to be controversial and slow. Too many Ancestors are still housed in colonial institutions, with no plans for their return. Given this, some—perhaps many—descendant communities will not be interested in pursuing scientific research prior to reburial. This is a particularly hard choice for outside researchers to accept, but they must do so to begin redressing the power imbalances in anthropology and archaeology. These disciplines have a difficult history that is rooted in colonialism. Respecting the wishes of descendant communities is the only way to do ethical, responsible, and meaningful research going forward.

Repatriation has indeed transformed the research landscape. It has required a major shift in how Western-trained scientists think about and approach this kind of work. Indigenous scientists and community-based researchers have been doing this work and doing it well for many years already. They’ve shown that community-led repatriation projects can challenge assumptions, build respectful relationships, increase community research capacity, and still meaningfully contribute to scientific discussions. Continuing to focus on repatriation as “the end” of research ignores the alternate collaborative path forward.

Working with and for descendant communities puts research skills and outcomes to work in service of something bigger. Much work remains, but from here we can start to do better together.

Chelsea H. Meloche photo
CHELSEA H. MELOCHE is a doctoral candidate in the department of archaeology at Simon Fraser University.
Laure Spake photo
LAURE SPAKE is a research fellow at the University of Otago.
Katherine L. Nichols photo
KATHERINE L. NICHOLS is a doctoral candidate in Indigenous studies and archaeology at Simon Fraser University.
 
x to dobut.

Repartiations will only benefit the political class. No one else.
0TplgsorR-Q


Nevermind. This is what I get for just reading the title of the article.
 
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Lol none of these people give a single solitary fuck about their ancestry or any relics found. They just want money.
 
Go protest at the Facebook campus and make them give you back your land.

LMK how that goes.
 
Fuck off. You lost. Get over it and make something better.

Plenty of Cultures have been fucked into oblivion and come back far stronger. If you're so special make something people fucking want that doesn't belong to prehistory.
 
Which one was it that they took all the remains, all the artifacts, which would have transformed what we knew about that era, and fucking burned them?

Was it the Ancient One?
 
Good on ya for including the author photos @Penis Drager, it adds a whole extra level.
Also, here's something I've always wondered. Who counts as the "true" descendant?
Let's say a woman has 7 kids, then dies, husband remarries, next woman has another 7 more. Which of these 14 family lines contains as the person who would get those artifacts? The eldest child? Eldest son? Eldest or eldest son of the second wife?
In this case, it's "the tribe" but that just means "The leaders of that tribe" and not the direct descendants of the people who created or once owned these items, but what if the thing in question actually came from the people who had the land before those people and we have some kind of Hopi v. Navajo situation going on?
 
Who counts as the "true" descendant?
It's generally impossible to actually know if these people are directly related to the individual owner of these artifacts at all.
Basically how it works is you, as a descendant of a tribe can file some paperwork with the local government to establish a tribal office there (if not on a reservation) and they'll typically grant it to you if an office doesn't already have jurisdiction there and it is on land formerly held by your tribe. Funds raised by this office is the source of so-called "Injun money." Whoever is deemed the "head" of the office calls the shots in this case.
On reservations, tribal governments appoint their leadership. They typically are above these tribal offices on the pecking order when it comes to repatriation shit.
 
Get fucked, abbo cunts. You're lucky we don't grind up the bones to use as fertilizer when we're done researching them.
 
Repatriation =/= reparations you niggers.
This article is about taking shit out of museums/research facilities and returning them to the land in which they were discovered or the people who once populated the region.
How would that help? The reason these artefacts are in museums is for people to see as much as possible in one single place.
images (10).jpg
There is no way they will be better taken care of by people with any emotional attachment to them than with people whose job is to handle them properly.
 
Alot of these natives claim to speak for their tribes. 9/10 they do not. You are normally talking to the most vocal of them. Most of these tribes are made up of smaller tribes pulled together.

Its a bit like asking for reparations. The ones pushing the hardest always get the lions share and the rest miss out as they aren't part of the family unit that is leading the claim but are still legally part of the larger tribe.

Using racism and guilt to enrich themselves. Whole fucking over the rest of the tribe
 
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