Zuckerman Molly K, Marklein Kathryn E, Austin Rita M, Hofman Courtney A
Department of Anthropology and Middle Eastern Cultures and Cobb Institute of Archaeology, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, Mississippi, USA.
The Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, District of Columbia, USA.
Am J Biol Anthropol. 2025 Jan;186(1):e25015. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.25015. Epub 2024 Aug 23.
An ethical paradigm shift currently taking place within biological anthropology is pushing scholars to envisage and develop paths toward more ethical futures. Drawing from case studies in our own teaching, research, and fieldwork experience, we reflect on the complex, diverse, and dynamic nature of ethical considerations in our field. We discuss the acquisition and institutional narrative of a human osteological teaching collection at the University of Louisville as an embodiment of structural apathy turned structural violence, and the need for professional guidance in the potential retirement of deceased individuals from our classrooms. In documented collections (i.e., the Robert J. Terry Collection), we share our process and scholarly reemphasis of the humanity of a deceased individual through contextualized analysis (i.e., osteobiography and archival history) and postmortem agentive acts. Lastly, we present an archeological site in the U.S. Virgin Islands, which poses ethical concerns as biocultural bioarcheologists and archeologists attempt to negotiate the possible wishes of the deceased with the cultural value of reconstructing the community's otherwise undocumented past, all amidst the immediate threat of anthropogenic climate change. We offer these exercises and discussion in ethically engaged projects transparently and with an overarching admission that none are models for replication. Rather, at various stages in our careers and engagement with ethics, we acknowledge that progress is worthwhile, albeit challenging, and that proceeding forward collectively as biological anthropologists should be deliberate, reflexive, and compassionate for deceased individuals and their descendant communities, as well as among and between colleagues.
生物人类学目前正在发生的一场伦理范式转变,正促使学者们设想并开拓通往更具伦理的未来的道路。借鉴我们自身教学、研究和田野工作经历中的案例研究,我们反思了本领域伦理考量的复杂、多样和动态本质。我们讨论了路易斯维尔大学人类骨骼教学藏品的获取及机构叙事,它体现了结构性冷漠如何转变为结构性暴力,以及在从我们的课堂上撤下已故个体标本时需要专业指导。在有记录的藏品(即罗伯特·J·特里藏品)中,我们分享了通过情境化分析(即骨骼传记和档案历史)以及死后能动性行为,对已故个体人性进行的研究过程和学术再强调。最后,我们介绍了美属维尔京群岛的一个考古遗址,当生物文化生物考古学家和考古学家试图在人为气候变化的紧迫威胁下,将已故者可能的意愿与重建该社区原本无记录的过去的文化价值进行协调时,该遗址引发了伦理问题。我们在道德参与项目中透明地提供这些实践和讨论,并总体承认没有一个是可复制的模式。相反,在我们职业生涯和与伦理相关的不同阶段,我们承认进步是值得的,尽管具有挑战性,而且作为生物人类学家共同前行应该是审慎、反思性的,并且要对已故个体及其后代社区以及同事之间怀有同情心。