216 pages, 6 x 9
4 b&w photos, 4 maps, 3 charts, 1 table
Paperback
Release Date:14 Feb 2025
ISBN:9780774881050
Hardcover
Release Date:14 Feb 2025
ISBN:9780774881043
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Unearthing Forgotten Values

Toward a Meaningful Archaeological Practice

UBC Press, Purich Books

About 90 percent of archaeological activity in North America is driven by private-sector development. In the process, archaeology is often used to undermine the interests of those whose material culture it allegedly seeks to preserve and interpret. Unearthing Forgotten Values explores the disrespectful and ultimately unethical nature of much commercial archaeology – or cultural resource management (CRM) – and proposes a praxis that puts Indigenous communities and their heritage first.

Based on lengthy experience working with and within Indigenous communities in British Columbia and around the world, Sean P. Connaughton discusses such thorny issues as the meaning of decolonization, Indigenous land rights and sovereignty, the commodification of heritage and corporatization of archaeology, and how the state continues to support projects that will exacerbate climate change. Weaving together real-life stories, fieldwork, scholarship, data, introspection, and an inquiry into human values, he promotes a more inclusive, equitable practice, illustrating the ways in which CRM can be infused with lessons drawn from Indigenous world views and ways of being.

Unearthing Forgotten Values is a rare study that charts a practical course for change. Professional archaeology will be the better for it.

This informative examination of private-sector archaeological practice in British Columbia will be invaluable to students and practising archaeologists. Its candid, topical approach will also appeal to a global audience of Indigenous and non-Indigenous social scientists who are involved in archaeology.

Sean P. Connaughton is the senior archaeologist and manager for Inlailawatash, a Tsleil-Waututh–owned heritage firm in North Vancouver, British Columbia. He is a Northwest Coast permit holder and a field director for the Northwest Coast and Subarctic/Boreal Forest culture areas. As well as having over twenty years of professional experience in both academic and commercial archaeology, he writes, researches, and publishes, and he has taught in the Department of Anthropology at Kwantlen Polytechnic University since 2010.

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