包容性考古学

IF 1.9 2区 历史学 N/A ARCHAEOLOGY Advances in Archaeological Practice Pub Date : 2022-08-01 DOI:10.1017/aap.2022.19
N. Martínez-Tagüeña, G. Sánchez, John Carpenter, Luz Alicia Torres Cubillas, Leopoldo Vélez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在墨西哥,根据《墨西哥宪法》第73条第XXV款和《关于古迹和考古遗址的联邦法》第27条,考古遗产属于所有社会成员。国立Antropología历史研究所(INAH)成立于1939年,是一个联邦政府机构,负责考古遗产的研究、保护和传播。虽然这些遗产属于所有人,但严格的规则和程序在职业专业人员和对过去感兴趣的不同社区(即收藏家、当地博物馆、后裔社区)之间造成了不平等的关系。考虑到对过去感兴趣的社区的所有各种知识体系(即学术的、技术的、地方的和传统的)的包容性考古学早就应该开始实践了。在这里,我们描述了来自墨西哥索诺拉州的案例研究,以建议与文物收藏家、土著社区、研究人员、考古学家和INAH索诺拉州当局一起实施几项影响深远的活动。我们的试点建议需要在墨西哥的其他地区实施,这些地区继续优先考虑考古叙事,而不是其他关于我们过去的叙事。
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Arqueología Incluyente
Abstract In Mexico, archaeological heritage belongs to all members of society, according to section XXV of Article 73 of the Mexican Constitution and Article 27 of the federal law on monuments and archaeological sites. The Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH) was founded in 1939 as a federal government agency for the research, protection, and dissemination of archaeological heritage. Although this heritage belongs to all, stringent rules and procedures create an unequal relationship between career professionals and the diverse communities interested in the past (i.e., collectors, local museums, descendant communities). It is long due to begin practicing an inclusive archaeology that considers all the various knowledge systems (i.e., academic, technical, local, and traditional) of the communities interested in the past. Here, we describe case studies from Sonora, Mexico, to propose the implementation of several far-reaching activities with artifact collectors, Indigenous communities, researchers, archaeologists, and INAH Sonora authorities. Our pilot proposal needs to be implemented in other areas of Mexico that continue to prioritize archaeological narratives over other narratives about our past.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
21.40%
发文量
39
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