New publication announcement
Editorial:
Collaborative Archaeologies and Ethnoarchaeological Practice
by Bill Angelbeck and Maria Wunderlich
DOI: 10.54799/NKVU6179
Highlights:
The authors look back at the historical and political beginnings of collaborative archaeologies. These beginnings reveal that collaboration emerged mainly from Indigenous activism rather than from academic theory alone.
Examples from different parts of the world show how collaboration works in practice, but also how questions and discussions about power, consent, heritage rights have been changing and challenging archaeological disciplines.
Taken together, the articles in this issue are considered as a call for both interdisciplinary and ethically engaged archaeology, which is, of course, relevant today beyond the field itself.
Submit your contribution to EAZ 60 (1) here.
Cover of EAZ 59 (1). Photo: A. Azizi, www.aziziphoto.com.