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Department of Anatomy researcher Professor Siân Halcrow is collaborating with two biological anthropology colleagues from the United States to review the use of human skeletal remains for teaching and research.

Department of Anatomy researcher Professor Siân Halcrow is collaborating with two biological anthropology colleagues from the United States to review the use of human skeletal remains for teaching and research.

Their aim is to develop ethical guidelines and standards for professional practice for the field by publishing papers on the ethical handling of remains of deceased individuals and ancestors.

“We call for ethical guidelines that emphasize transparency, respect for descendant communities, and the consideration of non-destructive research methods. We advocate for rehumanising these remains, fostering collaboration with descendant communities, and supporting efforts for repatriation.”

“It’s important for me to be part of this international response that will help to set clear guidelines for the collection, curation, and use of human skeletal remains of deceased individuals and ancestors going forward,” Sian says.

The team recently published in a special issue in the American Journal of Biological Anthropology. Sian says she is very happy to be part of this special issue.

“Ethics needs to be at the forefront of all the work that we do, and this set of papers challenges the field to critically evaluate our work in light of the colonial and racist foundations of anatomy and anthropology.”

The publication describes the ethical challenges surrounding human skeletal remains in biological anthropology, focusing particularly on the historical exploitation of marginalised communities, often acquired without consent, and treated as scientific specimens rather than as individuals with complex histories.

Siân is a biological anthropologist with a research interest in the ethics of the use and curation of human skeletal remains, and assessment of past human social and health responses to major transformative events.

Her research interests are in understanding major human changes in the past through the experiences of infants and children - the most vulnerable people in the population.

Her recent work is assessing the ethical implications of historical anatomical human remains in museums, collected mainly in the 19th and 20th centuries using means that we might consider unethical today.

Read the article “Ethics in the Curation and Use of Human Skeletal Remains for Teaching and Research” in the American Journal of Biological Anthropology .

Department of Anatomy

Think you know what Anatomy is? Think again! Like the proverbial iceberg, Anatomy at Otago is about more than just bones and muscles, it's about people: How we begin life and how we develop, how we move and how we function, how we remember and how we forget...

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