2012 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2011 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2010 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2009 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2008 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2007 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2006 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2005 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
2004 SAA Ethics Bowl Cases
Cultures at Risk: Human Rights and Heritage Today
B. Sunday Eiselt, Southern Methodist University [Fall 2016]
Heritage: History and the Past Today Uzi Baram, New College of Florida [Fall 2016]
Indigenous Archaeologies Randall McGuire, SUNY-Binghamton [Spring 2017]
Legal and Ethical Issues in Anthropology Charles Riggs, Fort Lewis College [Spring 2017]
Reading and Composition: Archaeological Ethics Katie Chiou, University of Alabama [Fall 2015]
Who Owns the Past? Bettina Arnold, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee [Fall 2016]
An Introduction to Ethics & Archaeology [December 2006] Gender Equity in Archaeology [December 2006] Indigenous Communities & Archaeological Practice [December 2006] Looting, Collecting, & Archaeology [December 2006] Cultural Property in War & Peace: The Nation and the Law [December 2006]
The Archiving the Archaeologists series is an oral history project of video interviews of archaeologists near retirement or already retired. Listen to real archaeologists reflect on their careers, how and why they became archaeologists, and their contributions to the discipline on the SAA YouTube channel.
Aimed at high school students, the Is the Past in Your Future? [PDF 1.1 MB] brochure from the SAA provides brief information about a career in archaeology.
The National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) of 1966 is a federal law that protects archaeological resources in the United States. The What is the NPHA? [PDF 1.3 MB] fact-sheet from SAA helps explain the NHPA. It includes common misconceptions about the law and explains the Section 106 review process, which is particularly important to historic preservation.
If you are an SAA member interested in serving as your area's Archaeology Education Coordinator, please contact [email protected].
SAA gives out several archaeology education and outreach-related awards each year: the Distinguished Achievement in Public Archaeology Award, the Excellence in Public Archaeology Programming Award, the Outstanding Public Archaeology Initiative Award, the Binford Family Award for Teaching Scientific Reasoning in Archaeology, the Robert S. Peabody Institute of Archaeology Award for Archaeology And Education. Learn more about these awards, nominate a worthy individual or project, and view the past honorees!
SAA's archaeology education newsletter started as the Public Education Committee's print newsletter Archaeology & Public Education (A&PE). Running from 1990 to 1998, it featured news, events, and K-12 lesson plans aimed at expanding awareness of archaeology and heritage issues. It switched to a web format from 2000 to 2004. After a hiatus, it returned as Public Archaeology Notes (PAN) in 2016, managed by SAA's Archaeology Education Coordinators as a way to share news across regions.
Looking for video content for your classroom? The SAA YouTube channel has short informational videos on a wide variety of topics, long-form interviews with archaeologists, and publicly-available online seminars.
Does your state have an annual archaeology celebration? Submit a poster to the SAA State Archaeology Celebration Poster Contest! Learn more about the award and the submissions process.
The Committee on Repatriation tracks national legislation, testifies at hearings when necessary, and represents SAA in discussions and negotiations on repatriation issues.
Join to lend your voice and your numbers to our efforts to ensure the archaeological record will exist for future generations.
Please visit a selection of items on topics of race, inequality, and decolonization from The SAA Archaeological Record, Advances in Archaeological Practice, American Antiquity, and Latin American Antiquity.
SAA members, log into the Member Center to access 30+ hours of free continuing education recordings. This is an exclusive member benefit.
Everyone can enjoy and learn from these events. See SAA's Continuing Education playlist on YouTube for publicly-available recordings of past lectures.
The seminars we offer on-demand will change over time. If there is a past online seminar recording you'd like to view, please let us know at [email protected]. We can't guarantee that we can meet your request, but your input will help us make decisions about what to offer next.
In 1996, the SAA Executive Board adopted its Principles of Archaeological Ethics, and in 2016, membership voted to add a Principle No. 9. In 2018, the SAA Board created a series of task forces which culminated in a 2024 update to the Principles, which were adopted overwhelmingly by members on the January 2024 ballot. Download the most current SAA Principles of Archaeological Ethics [PDF 183 KB] to print or use for classrooms or training.