Abstract

ABSTRACT This article calls attention to the critical potential of heritage and Critical Heritage Studies to contribute to what I argue are urgent entwined critical justice issues of Indigenous rights in the Anthropocene. Recent shifts in recognition and affirmation of Indigenous rights, during a period of rapid acceleration of climate and environmental change, demand (k)new approaches in Critical Heritage Studies. The article questions what heritage does and can do, highlighting the potential for positive transformation through recognition of Indigenous rights, laws, relational kinship obligations, and ecocultural heritage stewardship.

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