A note from the SAA Publications Committee on a selection of SAA publications on Race, Inequality, and Decolonization
The recent murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many other
Black people by police have drawn attention to institutional racism and the
effects of long-term discrimination against Black people. Like many academic
communities, archaeology has a racism problem.
The SAA Publications Committee
echoes the statement from the SAA Board and the statement from SAA Editors and
stands in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement and other
organizations fighting racism and systemic discrimination in the United States
and globally. In responding to the SAA Board’s call to "stop, listen, and
evaluate how we can each contribute to breaking down inequality", the SAA
Publications Committee has collected a selection of SAA publications and made
them free to read to support archaeologists’ understanding more about racism.
We also recommend the reading list “Archaeology of Racism” prepared by
Professor April Beisaw, which is online here.
We also encourage you
to visit the Society of Black Archaeologists website for additional information
and events at societyofblackarchaeologists.com. We recognize that while reading to improve understanding is important, specific
anti-racist actions are necessary. We encourage SAA members to share their
ideas for actions to support and increase representation of Black
archaeologists directly with the SAA Board to advance the Society’s actions on
this topic.
Special selections
Please also visit a series of special pages below where we highlight a selection of items from the SAA Archaeological Record, Advances in Archaeological Practice, American Antiquity, and Latin American Antiquity. In addition, the editors of the SAA journals have crafted a strong statement and set of actions. This statement will appear in each journal (and online as FirstView), as well as on the SAA website.