The report “We want them back”, published earlier this year, found at least 5958 human remains from colonials contexts in the collections of museums and scientific institutions in the geographical area of Berlin. The report, commissioned by the Berlin Senate, is the first systematic survey of the provenance of human remains from colonial contexts in Berlin’s institutions. Why – given the history – are these human remains still here? Where is the systematic effort to repatriate them and return them to their families and communities of origin?</p
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is twofold. Firstly, to investigate the documentality of human re...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, to investigate the documentality of human rem...
In 2019 media articles about clearance of human remains at a museum in Gothenburg caught my attentio...
While occasional earlier restitutions of colonially acquired human remains, mostly skulls, from Germ...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begunattempt...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begunattempt...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begun attemp...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begunattempt...
This research explores the history and dynamics of curation and repatriation of human remains in So...
For decades, the rights of museums to house, exhibit, and research human remains, in particular thos...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
Many museums and other scientific institutions still possessing the bodily remains of Indigenous peo...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
The discussion about objects, human remains and archives from former colonial territories is becomin...
European museums (of ethnography) and the material culture under their custody — a large portion of ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is twofold. Firstly, to investigate the documentality of human re...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, to investigate the documentality of human rem...
In 2019 media articles about clearance of human remains at a museum in Gothenburg caught my attentio...
While occasional earlier restitutions of colonially acquired human remains, mostly skulls, from Germ...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begunattempt...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begunattempt...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begun attemp...
In recent years, curators of German ethnological and university anatomical museums have begunattempt...
This research explores the history and dynamics of curation and repatriation of human remains in So...
For decades, the rights of museums to house, exhibit, and research human remains, in particular thos...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
Many museums and other scientific institutions still possessing the bodily remains of Indigenous peo...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
The discussion about objects, human remains and archives from former colonial territories is becomin...
European museums (of ethnography) and the material culture under their custody — a large portion of ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is twofold. Firstly, to investigate the documentality of human re...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, to investigate the documentality of human rem...
In 2019 media articles about clearance of human remains at a museum in Gothenburg caught my attentio...