Your search returned 6 results
-
1980s: Repatriation - a significant step towards the future
https://australian.museum/learn/news/blog/1980s-repatriation-a-significant-step-towards-the-future/In 1981 Anthropologists celebrated the ‘return to Vanuatu of an important ceremonial slit drum … one of only five surviving in the world’.
-
Case Study: La Perouse 2002
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/community-engagement/case-study-la-perouse-2002/Ancestral and sacred material from La Perouse was of scientific interest, but the wishes of First Nations people take precedence.
-
Right of reply: Reconnecting community knowledge to cultural belongings
https://australian.museum/visit/whats-on/right-of-reply-repatriation/Discover the AM’s groundbreaking digital repatriation project as Nathan “mudyi” Sentance, First Nations Digital Program Manager at the Australian Museum provides an exclusive behind-the-scenes look.
-
Community engagement
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/community-engagement/The Australian Museum strives to provide First Nation communities with information in an accessible form, about the cultural objects and other materials from their communities that are in the collections, and access to cultural material.
-
Case Study: Western Australian Museum 2005
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/community-engagement/case-study-western-australian-museum-2005/Repatriation is rewarding for participants, but difficulties arise when returning diverse material and multiple institutions are involved.
-
Case Study: Larrakia 1996 / 2002
https://australian.museum/learn/cultures/community-engagement/case-study-larrakia-1996-2002/The Museum's repatriation of artefacts to Larrakia, NT, in 1996 established a relationship that would be called upon again in 2002.
-
Machu Picchu and the Golden Empires of Peru
Now open
Tickets on sale -
Future Now
Touring exhibition
On now -
Burra
Permanent education space
10am - 4.30pm -
Minerals
Permanent exhibition
Open daily