Ethics Bowl Archive

Past cases

2012 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2011 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2010 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2009 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2008 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2007 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2006 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2005 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

2004 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases

Course syllabus

Cultures at Risk: Human Rights and Heritage Today

B. Sunday Eiselt, Southern Methodist University [Fall 2016]

Heritage: History and the Past Today
Uzi Baram, New College of Florida [Fall 2016]

Indigenous Archaeologies
Randall McGuire, SUNY-Binghamton [Spring 2017]

Legal and Ethical Issues in Anthropology
Charles Riggs, Fort Lewis College [Spring 2017]

Reading and Composition: Archaeological Ethics
Katie Chiou, University of Alabama [Fall 2015]

Who Owns the Past?
Bettina Arnold, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee [Fall 2016]

Readings in Archaeological Ethics

An Introduction to Ethics & Archaeology [December 2006]

Gender Equity in Archaeology [December 2006]

Indigenous Communities & Archaeological Practice [December 2006]

Looting, Collecting, & Archaeology [December 2006]

Cultural Property in War & Peace: The Nation and the Law [December 2006]

 

ATTENTION! BEWARE OF HOUSING POACHERS!

The Society for American Archaeology (SAA) has learned of a company that is attempting to do business with SAA exhibitors and attendees by soliciting them for sleeping rooms in regard to the SAA Annual Meeting. The SAA does not endorse booking hotel reservations via another company or source. The only authorized sources for making hotel room reservations for the annual meeting is the SAA website and with the hotel directly.

If you receive any solicitations either via email or telephone from other third parties/vendors incorrectly identifying themselves as an official SAA housing representative or member of exhibition services, we ask that you please delete the message immediately, ignore any further requests, and contact the SAA’s executive director immediately at +1 (202) 559-4580.