Article ID: CBB019823834

Sharing ethics of displaying human remains in museums (2020)

unapi

Human remains have a unique status within museum collections and raise several multifaceted and complex ethical and legal issues. The personal, cultural, symbolic, spiritual or religious significance they have for individuals and groups bears a particular responsibility on the museums in the way they are acquired, handled, and displayed. Human remains may also have the potential to contribute to the culture and common good, through research, teaching and, in a respectful mode, exhibitions. As a valuable resource, they actively encourage personal and community reflection on humanity’s shared heritage. As protagonists of an historical revision process, scientific collections can play a significant role in challenging prejudices and stereotypes of the past. They may foster the change and promote a deeper understanding of different cultural perspec-tives and practices, supporting equality and inclusion, and encouraging a policy open to participation and discussion on choices, in a close relationship with local communities. In a complex and ever-changing world, museums need to ensure respect for the different ways of interpreting nature and human history by engaging with all stakeholders. This includes ethical issues related to the provenance of objects, acquisition, care, interpretation, display, and request for restitution, as well as a commitment by museums to stimulate constructive debate and consultation among the native people belonging the remains.

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Authors & Contributors
Bates, A. W.
Bogaard, Han van den
Canadelli, Elena
Craske, Matthew
Fedotova, Anastasia A.
Ferber, Sarah
Journals
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Configurations: A Journal of Literature, Science, and Technology
Current Anthropology
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
History of Science
Journal of the History of Collections
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
Ashgate
Harvard University Press
Liverpool University Press
Palgrave Macmillan
Princeton University Press
Concepts
Human anatomy
Human body
Museums
Collectors and collecting
Medicine
Human remains
People
Baartman, Saartje (Sarah)
Vrolik, Gerard
Vrolik, Willem
Whitman, Walt
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
21st century
18th century
20th century, late
17th century
Places
Great Britain
Europe
United States
London (England)
Africa
Australia
Institutions
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Smithsonian Institution
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