Clark Spencer Larsen on
behalf of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists
Native American Graves Protection and
Repatriation Committee
c/o Departmental Consulting Archeologist
National Park Service (2275)
1849 C St. NW. (NC340)
Washington DC, 20240
Dear Committee Members:
The American Association of Physical
Anthropologists (AAPA) appreciates the opportunity to comment on the
Draft Principles of Agreement Regarding the Disposition of Culturally
Unidentifiable Human Remains. The AAPA is the leading professional
organization for physical anthropologists in the United States. We
currently have more than 1700 members with research interests in all
areas of human biology, including the study of human skeletal remains
spanning the entire history of humankind in all areas of the world. The
AAPA was part of the coalition of Native American and scientific groups
that worked for the passage of NAGPRA. We continue to support the key
goal of NAGPRA, which is to ensure that culturally affiliated Native
American groups are allowed to make decisions regarding the disposition
of their ancestral remains.
We appreciate the difficulty of the
task you face in attempting to develop recommendations for specific
actions for developing a process for disposition of culturally
unidentifiable human remains. This is one of the most important duties
Congress gave to your committee. We believe the draft principles provide
a good starting point for the development of a recommendation for such a
process. However, there are several areas where the draft principles
extend NAGPRA beyond the legislative intent expressed in the statute and
in the associated House and Senate reports.
The draft principals are based on the
flawed premise that repatriation of culturally unidentified human
remains is the intent of the NAGPRA (section A.1.B., for example).
Instead, its purpose is to provide federally recognized groups with the
authority to determine the appropriate disposition of culturally
affiliated remains. Culturally affiliated groups have used this
authority in many different ways. In some cases they have decided on
repatriation and reburial while in others they have determined that an
appropriate disposition of their ancestral remains is to allow them to
be maintained in museums. It is presumptuous of the committee to imply
that these alternative dispositions are inappropriate or in some way in
conflict with the fundamental goal of NAGPRA.
Culturally unidentifiable remains, by
definition, are those of people who do not have a relationship of shared
group identity with a modern tribe. Modern tribes, therefore, do not
have the authority under NAGPRA to make decisions about the disposition
of culturally unidentifiable collections. The task of your committee is
to balance the absence of a relationship of shared group identity
between culturally unidentified remains and any specific group of modern
people against the value these remains have as sources of information
about our collective past. Culturally unidentifiable remains have
enormous scientific value because of the broad implications the
information they can yield has for basic and applied research in the
social and natural sciences, medicine, and forensic work. That is, these
remains have value for learning about life in distant times, as well as
importance for significant present-day medical and forensic concerns. In
many cases, these are remains of people who have many living descendants
that may not be tribal members or even identify themselves as Native
Americans. In other cases, culturally unidentifiable remains may be
those of people from extinct groups very distantly related to any modern
people.
Because many people who do not
identify themselves as Native Americans have a relationship to and thus
a valid interest in the disposition of culturally unidentifiable human
remains, Congress wisely decided to exclude them from the scope of the
regulatory authority provided by NAGPRA. Instead, Congress instructed
your committee to recommend specific actions for developing a process
for their disposition. This is in stark contrast to other areas of
NAGPRA, such as its penalty provisions, in which the Secretary of
Interior is explicitly instructed to develop regulations to carry out a
provision of the act. In formulating your recommendations, it is
important for you to bear this in mind: the Secretary of Interior does
not have the authority to implement regulations that compel museums to
give culturally unidentifiable remains to any group or coalition of
groups. Such regulations are clearly beyond the scope of the
Secretarys regulatory authority.
On the other hand, making
recommendations for regulations that identify ways in which museum,
scientific, Native American, and other groups can, on a voluntary basis,
develop mutually satisfactory agreements regarding the disposition of
culturally unidentifiable remains is clearly within the scope of the
regulatory authority the Secretary of Interior has under NAGPRA. These
are the kinds of recommendations that you should be considering. Your
apparent misunderstanding of the authority the Secretary of Interior has
for promulgating regulations under NAGPRA is a flaw that runs through
the proposed guidelines. To be useful to the Secretary, the actions you
propose must be within the scope of his authority and much of what the
guidelines propose is not.
In section A.4.b. the assumption is
made that repatriation is the most reasonable and consistent
choice for the disposition of culturally unidentified human remains.
This may be the opinion of some members of the committee, but we see no
basis for this conclusion in the statute. Why is giving culturally
unidentifiable remains to culturally unaffiliated groups the most
reasonable choice when the goal of NAGPRA is to give culturally
affiliated groups the opportunity to determine the disposition of
remains they are culturally affiliated with? There are other choices
that can and are being made. We believe that such choices should be made
on an institutional or local basis through consultation between the
museums and the culturally unaffiliated groups that have an interest in
specific collections of culturally unidentifiable remains.
One ethically problematic aspect of
NAGPRA is its denial of the right to make decisions about repatriation
to non-federally recognized tribes simply because they lack federal
recognition. Forcing such groups to be adopted by a federally recognized
group as is suggested in section C.2.a. is an effective, if demeaning,
solution to this inherent inequity in the law. Pointing to the Mashpee
case as an example of a generally applicable solution to this problem is
misleading. Everyone recognizes that such clear-cut situations in which
there is complete agreement between a museum, a federally recognized
group, and a non-federally recognized group are going to be exceedingly
rare. Using the Titicut as an example is also problematic because most
of the rest of the proposed guidelines are directed towards speeding the
repatriation of culturally unidentified remains. This apparent objective
of the guidelines would, in effect, give the right to make decisions
about the disposition of culturally affiliated remains to a small number
of select groups that have the money and political clout necessary to
obtain federal recognition in the future within a legal structure
designed to deny federal recognition and its associated entitlements to
as many Native American groups as possible.
The guidelines provide no guidance
whatsoever for assessing the strength of the relationship that must
exist between federally recognized and federally non-recognized groups
in order for a BIA listed tribe to bestow federal recognition upon
another non-recognized group. The Mashpee example you cite is an
inappropriate model for such cases since it involved a federally
recognized group (the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head) that was clearly
culturally affiliated with a set of remains (and thus clearly an
appropriate claimant) giving its approval to repatriation to a
non-federally recognized group which was also an appropriate claimant,
albeit one without legal standing. The situations that you are
attempting to address in the guidelines are very different from this
Mashpee example: by definition, there are no federally recognized tribes
that are culturally affiliated with culturally unidentifiable remains.
The committees apparent confusion over this issue leaves the door
open for abuse. For example, what will legally prevent Tribe A in
Montana that has federal recognition from giving its authority to Tribe
B, a federally unrecognized group in Connecticut, when there is no
relationship of shared group identity between Tribe A in Montana and the
remains in question?
We strongly object to the assertion
in section C.2b. that human remains for which there is little or no
information
should be speedily repatriated since they have little
educational, historical or scientific value. This is simply not true.
Human remains without contextual information (e.g., provenience,
historical context, and so on) do have very significant educational and
scientific values. In many respects they are comparable to the extensive
collections of well-preserved unprovenienced artifacts from burial
contexts that constitute the bulk of the teaching collections used by
archaeologists in the United States. For example, these unprovenienced
skeletal remains serve an extremely important role both in teaching
students osteology and in forensic research. Although many of the
culturally unidentifiable skeletal remains in teaching collections are
from people of European, Asian, and African ancestry, unprovenienced
Native American remains are a key component of these collections. They
give students an important comparative perspective on human variation
and the differences between ancient and modern materials that is
available from no other source.
In the long term, allowing us to
continue teaching osteology with unprovenienced, culturally
unidentifiable Native American remains will be beneficial for both
scientists and Native Americans. The students who are learning osteology
today are the ones who will make identifications of human remains in the
future and who will provide information essential for determining
whether the newly discovered remains are those of ancient Native
Americans or those of more recent immigrants to the New World. Because
of this important scientific value, these unaffiliated remains should
not be speedily repatriated. Moreover, it is likely that DNA is
preserved in culturally unidentifiable remains. In the future this
genetic evidence has the potential to provide important information on
cultural affiliation. With such information in hand, the likelihood of
being able to affiliate remains with a federally-recognized tribe
increases.
The Committee is correct in asserting
(section C.3.b.) that invasive testing for the purpose of documentation
is not required under the statute. However, the guidelines fail to
mention that the Department of Interior has taken the position that
scientific analysis, especially if it has the potential to clarify the
legal status of remains is both permissible and, in many cases, highly
desirable. This is entirely consistent with NAGPRAs requirement that
cultural affiliation be established by a preponderance of the
evidence from all relevant sources including biological,
archaeological, [and] anthropological information. We strongly object
to the stipulation that such testing may be performed if agreed upon
by the parties in consultation. This condition appears to give groups
whose relationship to a set of remains is yet to be determined the
authority to subvert the NAGPRA process by denying permission for the
scientific studies necessary to determine preponderance of evidence
(including that from biological, archaeological, and anthropological
sources) in a specific case. For example, it would appear to give a
group that was consulted as a courtesy owing to their concerns about the
identity of unidentified remains the authority to deny investigators the
ability to conduct tests to determine if a set of remains derived from
recent non-Native American immigrants to the United States or ancient
Native Americans.
There are clear instances in which
invasive testing, such as radiocarbon dating, provides the only way to
assure that inappropriate repatriations do not take place. For example,
this is what the Department of Interior has decided to do as part of its
attempt to determine the legal status of the Kennewick remains. It is
unacceptable to give one of the parties consulted as part of an
investigation into the identity of a set of remains the authority to
deny other groups with equally valid claims the ability to obtain the
scientific information necessary to resolve a dispute based on the
preponderance of all relevant sources of information as is clearly
stipulated in the statute.
The problems posed by the failure of
the guidelines to provide a basis for determining which groups have the
standing to make decisions about the testing of human remains is
underscored in section D.1 in which it is stated that joint
recommendations by institutions, Federal agencies, or states and
appropriate claimants should provide the basis for making decisions
about the disposition of culturally unidentified human remains. Who are
the relevant parties (D.1.a.) that the committee envisages as
having the authority to enter into such agreements? The examples given,
such as the Nebraska case, do not give us confidence that such
agreements would actually involve non-coercive agreements produced
through consultation with all relevant parties.
The committees suggestion in
section D.2. that
it is reasonable to look for regional solutions
that best fit regional circumstances makes a great deal of sense.
However, it must not be assumed that simply because remains from Site A
are located in an area Tribe A currently inhabits that these culturally
unidentified remains somehow have a special relationship with Tribe A.
This is not what the statue envisages as cultural affiliation and should
not be used as the basis for a weakened or attenuated interpretation of
affiliation that is extended to culturally unaffiliated remains. That
said, consultation involving all relevant parties is a productive
and important part of the discussion and should be encouraged. We
strongly believe that such consultation should involve all groups and
individuals with a potential relationship to a set of human remains in a
meaningful way, not just those groups and individuals that have the
financial and political resources to assert their views in the legal
arena.
Thank you for considering the views
of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists on this
important issue. I look forward to discussing our concerns with you at
your next committee meeting.
Sincerely,
Clark Spencer Larsen
President, American Association of
Physical Anthropologists
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