Abstract
This article follows the evolution of a year‐long community fieldwork programme, designed to bridge archaeology’s methodological approach and thematic concerns about the past with the interests and social realities of Inuit people. Focusing on a series of practical workshops run in partnership with the Kitikmeot Heritage Society of Cambridge Bay, the work explores how the development of a broader, more acculturated practice of archaeology allows the discipline better to navigate new directions in both academic and local understandings of history.
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