Article ID: CBB001212640

“Your DNA Is Our History”: Genomics, Anthropology, and the Construction of Whiteness as Property (2013)

unapi

Reardon, Jenny (Author)
TallBear, Kimberly (Author)


Current Anthropology
Volume: 53, no. S5
Issue: S5
Pages: 233-245
Publication date: 2013
Language: English


Publication Date: 2013
Edition Details: Part of a special section, “Collecting and Contested Ownership”

During the nineteenth century, the American School of Anthropology enfolded Native peoples into their histories, claiming knowledge about and artifacts of these cultures as their rightful inheritance and property. Drawing both on the Genographic Project and the recent struggles between Arizona State University and the Havasupai Tribe over the use of Havasupai DNA, in this essay we describe how similar enfoldments continue today---despite most contemporary human scientists' explicit rejection of hierarchical ideas of race. We seek to bring greater clarity and visibility to these constitutive links between whiteness, property, and the human sciences in order that the fields of biological anthropology and population genetics might work to move toward their stated commitments to antiracism (a goal, we argue, that the fields' antiracialism impedes). Specifically, we reflect on how these links can inform extralegal strategies to address tensions between U.S. and other indigenous peoples and genome scientists and their facilitators (ethicists, lawyers, and policy makers). We conclude by suggesting changes to scientific education and professional standards that might improve relations between indigenous peoples and those who study them, and we introduce mechanisms for networking between indigenous peoples, scholars, and policy makers concerned with expanding indigenous governance of science and technology.

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Description On the way in which European American ideas of property have been imposed upon native peoples since the 19th century even by anthropological scientists.


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Authors & Contributors
Anderson, Mark
Anderson, Warwick H.
Banks, David J.
Blanchard, Pascal
Burkholder, Zoe
Chadarevian, Soraya de
Journals
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Social Studies of Science
Comparative Studies in Society and History
History and Anthropology
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of the History of Biology
Publishers
American Philosophical Society
New York University
Duke University Press
Laterza
Liverpool University Press
McGill-Queen's University Press
Concepts
Science and race
Race
Anthropology
Genomics
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Science and society
People
Boas, Franz
Ameghino, Florentino
Benedict, Ruth Fulton
Du Bois, William Edward B.
Foucault, Michel
Lombroso, Cesare
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, early
21st century
20th century, late
Modern
Places
United States
Australia
Mexico
Africa
Brazil
Great Britain
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