This chapter examines the return, reuse, and repositioning of archival materials within Indigenous communities and specifically within the Warumungu Aboriginal community in Central Australia. Over the last 20 years there has been an uptake in collecting institutions and scholars returning cultural, linguistic, and historical material to Indigenous communities in digital formats. These practices of digital return have been spurred by decolonisation and reconciliation movements globally, and at the same time catalysed by new technologies that allow for surrogates to be returned and concurrently reinvented, reused, and reimagined in community, kin-based, and place-based social and cultural networks. Examining the creation, use, and ongoing dev...
Over the last decade, ethnomusicologists have increasingly become preoccupied with the repatriation ...
Many Canadian First Nations and Aboriginal organizations are using digital media to revitalize their...
In the last twenty years, many collecting institutions have heeded the calls by indigenous activists...
I Indigenous peoples in Australia have been heavily documented in colonial archives and collection...
I Indigenous peoples in Australia have been heavily documented in colonial archives and collections....
The practices of archival return may provide some measure of social equity to Indigenous Australians...
Digitisation has made the return of recordings made by researchers in the past far more achievable t...
This article uses the Return, Reconcile, Renew: understanding the history, effects and opportunities...
This essay makes two points about digital collections. The first recognizes problems that emerge as ...
This article considers the shift in museums and archives toward repatriating cultural materials to i...
The Mukurtu project seeks to create prototype of an open source, standards-based, archiving and publ...
Many people in the modern world identify with a culture essentially transmitted through live or reco...
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Library, Archi...
Many people in the modern world identify with a culture essentially transmitted through live or reco...
On 19 January 2012, the workshop After the Return: Digital Repatriation and the Circulation of Indig...
Over the last decade, ethnomusicologists have increasingly become preoccupied with the repatriation ...
Many Canadian First Nations and Aboriginal organizations are using digital media to revitalize their...
In the last twenty years, many collecting institutions have heeded the calls by indigenous activists...
I Indigenous peoples in Australia have been heavily documented in colonial archives and collection...
I Indigenous peoples in Australia have been heavily documented in colonial archives and collections....
The practices of archival return may provide some measure of social equity to Indigenous Australians...
Digitisation has made the return of recordings made by researchers in the past far more achievable t...
This article uses the Return, Reconcile, Renew: understanding the history, effects and opportunities...
This essay makes two points about digital collections. The first recognizes problems that emerge as ...
This article considers the shift in museums and archives toward repatriating cultural materials to i...
The Mukurtu project seeks to create prototype of an open source, standards-based, archiving and publ...
Many people in the modern world identify with a culture essentially transmitted through live or reco...
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Library, Archi...
Many people in the modern world identify with a culture essentially transmitted through live or reco...
On 19 January 2012, the workshop After the Return: Digital Repatriation and the Circulation of Indig...
Over the last decade, ethnomusicologists have increasingly become preoccupied with the repatriation ...
Many Canadian First Nations and Aboriginal organizations are using digital media to revitalize their...
In the last twenty years, many collecting institutions have heeded the calls by indigenous activists...