Carrying Our Ancestors Home's team asked tribal experts in cultural heritage and repatriation what they think other tribal members should understand about repatriation, and how any tribal member can get involved in protecting cultural sites and ancestors.
A manual intended to be used as a practical guide for any tribe or individual interested in repatriation under NAGPRA and for museums and federal agencies to have a better understanding of the tribal aspect of NAGPRA.
Presentation by founding member of the Rapa Nui Repatriation Program, Piru Huke Atan at the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association Conference in Los Angeles, CA 2018.
GRASAC is a project started in 2005 to create a network of people who wish to share knowledge about Great Lake cultures, and a database of Great Lakes materials from across the world for digital reunification of cultural items.
The American Indian Student Movement for Repatriation at UCLA in 1990. A documentary film by Lucius Martin, who produced this in 2003-2004 as a student at UCLA.
This video explores the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act, passed in 1990, as human rights legislation. Here we have interviewed tribal practitioners from Southern California about the meaning and importance of this law.
This is a trailer for "Carrying Our Ancestors Home," a collaborative digital project which aims to illuminate the process and details of NAGPRA and repatriation work.
An illustrated comic explaining the obligations and impact of the NAGPRA legislation project, made for Native peoples, archaeologists, museum practitioners, and others in the repatriation process.