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Home » Leading Museums Remove Native Displays Amid New Federal Rules
The Alabama Department of Archives and History is the official repository of archival records for the U.S. state of Alabama. They have closed their Native American exhibit with no scheduled date to reopen. (Credit: 2UrbanGirls)

Leading Museums Remove Native Displays Amid New Federal Rules

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By SBE Staff on January 26, 2024 Education, News
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The American Museum of Natural History is closing two major halls as museums around the nation respond to updated policies from the Biden administration.

By Julia Jacobs and Zachary Small

The American Museum of Natural History will close two major halls exhibiting Native American objects, its leaders said on Friday, in a dramatic response to new federal regulations that require museums to obtain consent from tribes before displaying or performing research on cultural items.

“The halls we are closing are artifacts of an era when museums such as ours did not respect the values, perspectives and indeed shared humanity of Indigenous peoples,” Sean Decatur, the museum’s president, wrote in a letter to the museum’s staff on Friday morning. “Actions that may feel sudden to some may seem long overdue to others.”

The Alabama Department of Archives and History is the official repository of archival records for the U.S. state of Alabama. They have closed their Native American exhibit with no scheduled date to reopen.
(Credit: 2UrbanGirls)

The museum is closing galleries dedicated to the Eastern Woodlands and the Great Plains this weekend, and covering a number of other display cases featuring Native American cultural items as it goes through its enormous collection to make sure it is in compliance with the new federal rules, which took effect this month.

Museums around the country have been covering up displays as curators scramble to determine whether they can be shown under the new regulations. The Field Museum in Chicago covered some display cases, the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University said it would remove all funerary belongings from exhibition and the Cleveland Museum of Art has covered up some cases.

Read more at: NY Times

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