Archaeology, Indigenous Land rights and settler societies into the 21st Century
Ian Lilley
This symposium will consider where archaeological theory and practice are heading in the settler societies of Australia, Canada and New Zealand with the realisation of native title/indigenous land rights. In all three nations, archaeologists have been closely involved with land rights issues in various capacities. There has only been limited opportunity to compare and contrast the relationships between archaeological practice and land rights in each country, however, or indeed between settler societies and other societies with different sorts of histories. Speakers will include indigenous and non-indigenous scholars who will address a variety of conceptual and practical questions.
papers:
Author 1 Author 2 Title
Adds Maori heritage
Bradshaw Trains, Planes and Automobiles: Iron Ore Mining and Archaeology.
Fullagar Archaeology and native title in Australia; National and local perspectives compared
Klimko Wright Old Rocks and Hard place: Archaeology and land Claims/treaty in British Columbia
Lilley Archaeology, Land rights and settler societies: an introduction to the general problems
McDonald Rock Art, ethnicity and Native Title
Murray Mythology versus science? Archaeology and the human history of Australia
Nicholas Indigenous land rights, education and archaeology in Canada/ postcolonial perspectives by a non-Canadian white guy
Prins The Archaeological Colonisation of the Southern San
Rainbird The non-use of archaeology in Chamoro Land rights: a comparison with Aboriginal Australia s044rnb1
Williams The importance of cultural integrity and management in Archaeological research