The article reviews a digital repatriation project carried out by the Center for Native American and Indigenous Research at the American Philosophical Society over the course of eight years (2008-present). The project focused on building digital archives in four indigenous communities: Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, Penobscot Nation, Tuscarora Nation, and Ojibwe communities in both the United States and Canada. The article features insights from traditional knowledge keepers who helped to create a new system of co-stewarding the APS’ indigenous archival materials and recounts how the APS established protocols for cultural sensitivity. A new model of community-based scholarship is proposed to create a more equal and respectful relationshi...
The goal of this project is to digitize and present archaeologically-recovered materials from two On...
This article provides lessons learned through four cycles of the Tribal Digital Stewardship Cohort P...
Collaborations between tribal and nontribal organizations bring diverse communities together, often ...
The article reviews a digital repatriation project carried out by the Center for Native American and...
The APS Protocols have played an important role in helping the Society build stronger ties to the in...
As the term “digital repatriation” gains wider circulation, it has come under increased scrutiny and...
The APS has a long, distinguished history of preserving Native American languages. It began when Tho...
Benjamin P. Fletcher, College \u2709, English Increasing Awareness for the Indigenous in the 21st Ce...
In the last twenty years, many collecting institutions have heeded the calls by indigenous activists...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...
We are aware that many archival repositories in the West hold sensitive native cultural materials an...
Thirteen essays in Afterlives of Indigenous Archives, assembled and edited by Ivy Schweitzer and Gor...
The project will convene a group of regional Native American knowledge keepers, humanities scholars,...
On 19 January 2012, the workshop After the Return: Digital Repatriation and the Circulation of Indig...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...
The goal of this project is to digitize and present archaeologically-recovered materials from two On...
This article provides lessons learned through four cycles of the Tribal Digital Stewardship Cohort P...
Collaborations between tribal and nontribal organizations bring diverse communities together, often ...
The article reviews a digital repatriation project carried out by the Center for Native American and...
The APS Protocols have played an important role in helping the Society build stronger ties to the in...
As the term “digital repatriation” gains wider circulation, it has come under increased scrutiny and...
The APS has a long, distinguished history of preserving Native American languages. It began when Tho...
Benjamin P. Fletcher, College \u2709, English Increasing Awareness for the Indigenous in the 21st Ce...
In the last twenty years, many collecting institutions have heeded the calls by indigenous activists...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...
We are aware that many archival repositories in the West hold sensitive native cultural materials an...
Thirteen essays in Afterlives of Indigenous Archives, assembled and edited by Ivy Schweitzer and Gor...
The project will convene a group of regional Native American knowledge keepers, humanities scholars,...
On 19 January 2012, the workshop After the Return: Digital Repatriation and the Circulation of Indig...
In this article I examine the landscape of tribal or Indigenous archival management as it relates to...
The goal of this project is to digitize and present archaeologically-recovered materials from two On...
This article provides lessons learned through four cycles of the Tribal Digital Stewardship Cohort P...
Collaborations between tribal and nontribal organizations bring diverse communities together, often ...