U-M Repairing NAGPRA Controversy
All Things Consider — By Lauren Opatowski on January 18, 2012 at 11:00 amIn December 2010, Consider published an issue concerning the controversial issue of NAGPRA on U-M campus. For those who did not have the pleasure of reading the issue, here is a summary of the controversy: the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act is federal legislation that was passed in 1990 in order to protect the rights of Native American tribes. The Act is meant to ensure that all skeletal remains and respective sacred and funerary objects are rightfully returned to the tribe in which the body or item is culturally affiliated. This entails that all museums take serious note of their inventory and do whatever possible to locate this “cultural affiliation” and if successful, they must be properly repatriated.
However, because many museums take such pride in these artifacts they have acquired for so long, this implementation of the law did not run without controversy. The debate that surrounded the University of Michigan began after NAGRA expanded the law in 2010 to include the transfer of culturally unidentifiable human remains. This means that though a body or artifact might not be specifically identified with a tribe, they must research to find the tribe or tribes that were historically located in the area where the article was gathered, and surrender them over respectively. Soon after, it was reported that U-M did little to repatriate over 1,000 artifacts and was faulted for clinging to their inventory for future research instead of locating the rightful historic proprietor of the remains.
After much debate, the University announced last week that they have confirmed the decision to return their artifacts to respective Native American tribes. The Museum of Anthropology has spent the last year working with the Native American Student Association and other members of the community and now promises to change museum practices from here on out.
Vice President for Research, Stephen Forrest, assured that,
“Although the formal documentation of the policies and procedures has just been completed, we have been making steady progress since the law was clarified. Our approach is to follow both the letter and spirit of the law, and to respect the cultural requirements of the tribes in the process.”
This is a huge step for the University and we can only hope that our relationship with the Native American tribes and community can be restored and that we can once again share a mutual respect for once another.
By: Lauren Opatowski
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Tags: anthropology, Artifacts, History, NAGPRA, Native Americans


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