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The Archaeology of Colonialism in North America is a new series developed to highlight current research on colonialism in North America. This series is dedicated to illuminating the wide range of methodological strategies (archaeology, ethnoarchaeology, oral history, historical sources) used to understand processes of colonialism. In response to the developing concerns about colonialism and its effects on populations, the series integrates research on local, cultural, and historical complexities of the colonial experience, as well as on interactions between people and their material, social, and intellectual worlds. The series seeks to actively represent the growing number of descendant North American perspectives in archaeology by highlighting indigenous scholars. The goal of the series is to foster a broad understanding of the nature of colonialism across North America, with an emphasis on underpublished or relatively marginalized archaeology of regions such as Alaska, the Canadian Arctic, and Subarctic areas.
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