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Maritime Heritage in Crisis

Indigenous Landscapes and Global Ecological Breakdown. Archaeology and Indigenous Peoples

By (author) Richard M. Hutchings
Format: Paperback / softback
Publisher: Left Coast Press Inc, Walnut Creek, United States
Published: 7th Dec 2016
Dimensions: w 151mm h 228mm d 11mm
Weight: 275g
ISBN-10: 1629583480
ISBN-13: 9781629583488
Barcode No: 9781629583488
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Synopsis
Grounded in critical heritage studies and drawing on a Pacific Northwest Coast case study, Maritime Heritage in Crisis explores the causes and consequences of the contemporary destruction of Indigenous heritage sites in maritime settings. Maritime heritage landscapes are undergoing a period of unprecedented crisis: these areas are severely impacted by coastal development, continued population growth and climate change. Indigenous heritage sites are thought to be particularly vulnerable to these changes and cultural resource management is frequently positioned as a community's first line of defense, yet there is increasing evidence that this archaeological technique is an ineffective means of protection. Exploring themes of colonial dislocation and displacement, Hutchings positions North American archaeology as neoliberal statecraft: a tool of government designed to promote and permit the systematic clearance of Indigenous heritage landscapes in advance of economic development. Presenting the institution of archaeology and cultural resource management as a grave threat to Indigenous maritime heritage, Maritime Heritage in Crisis offers an important lesson on the relationship between neoliberal heritage regimes and global ecological breakdown.

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"This volume considers the threat to indigenous archaeological sites through the lenses of colonialism, imperialism, modernity and memory."
Claire Nesbitt, New Book Chronicle

"Richard Hutchings' Maritime Heritage in Crisis speaks out against the destruction of Indigenous heritage landscapes, tracking the ways in which rising sea levels and population growth have wreaked havoc to the coastal lands of the shishalh First Nation people located in the Pacific Northwest, as well as the shortcomings-even harms-of external cultural resource management (CRM).[...] The work's critique of both CRM and the field of archaeology alongside the emphasis on Indigenous rights to collective land management all set this book apart from others on the subject of climate change and coastal landscapes."
Sierra Watt, University of Kansas