01232nas a2200157 4500008004100000245007900041210006900120300000800189490000700197520072400204653001200928653002700940653002900967100001900996856005901015 2011 eng d00aIntroduction: Collaborative Ethnography and the Changing Worlds of Museums0 aIntroduction Collaborative Ethnography and the Changing Worlds o a2-30 v333 a
Collaboration with indigenous peoples has been a hallmark of ethnology since the mid-19th century, and throughout the 20th century numerous anthropologists acknowledged indigenous and local cultural specialists as co-producers of project results and knowledge. In recent decades, converging and co-mingling influences from inside and outside of anthropology - including action anthropology, community heritage studies, and passage of the Native American Graves, Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) - have led increasingly to wide-ranging kinds of consultations and partnered collaborative and participatory projects being conducted within or from museums.