Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series

The University of Arizona Press is pleased to distribute titles in the Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series, a scholarly, peer-reviewed, monograph series focused on the archaeology of northwest Mexico and the southwestern United States.

Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona

The Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona is a peer-reviewed monograph series sponsored by the School of Anthropology. Established in 1959, the series publishes archaeological and ethnographic papers that use contemporary method and theory to investigate problems of anthropological importance in the southwestern United States, Mexico, and related areas.

Selected volumes in the series are now open-access titles available through the University of Arizona Campus Repository.

Native Peoples of the Americas

Native Peoples of the Americas is an ambitious series whose scope ranges from North to South America and includes Middle America and the Caribbean. Each volume takes unique methodological approaches—archaeological, ethnographic, ecological, and/or ethno-historical—to frame cultural regions. Volumes cover select theoretical approaches that link regions, such as Native responses to conquest and the imposition of authority, environmental degradation, loss of Native lands, and the appropriation of Native knowledge and cosmologies. These books illuminate the strategies that Native Peoples have employed to maintain both their autonomies and identities. The series encourages the participation of Native, well-established, and emerging scholars as authors, contributors, and editors for the books.

Gila River Indian Community Anthropological Research Papers

The University of Arizona Press is pleased to be the distributor for the Gila River Indian Community Anthropological Research Papers. These important documents provide cutting-edge archaeological research that reveals insights into the pre-Hispanic world of the ancient Southwest.

Century Collection

The University of Arizona Press’s Century Collection employs the latest in digital technology to make books from our notable backlist available once again. Enriching historical and cultural experiences for readers, this collection offers these volumes unaltered from their original publication and in affordable digital or paperback formats.

Archaeology of Indigenous-Colonial Interactions in the Americas

Since 2007 The Archaeology of Indigenous-Colonial Interactions in the Americas book series highlights scholarship focused on Indigenous-colonial processes and engagement throughout all regions of the Americas, including newly expanded consideration of colonialism in the Pacific world, with a focus on the Hawaiian Islands.

The series editors seek single-authored monographs and edited volumes that incorporate a range of methodological approaches and theoretical frameworks. We work closely with authors in the development and review of their book projects, and recognize the growth potential of disruptive approaches, especially archaeologies that matter to communities. Especially encouraged are works that explore the potentials of examination and critique of colonial legacies of our discipline and fundamental contexts of the scientific production and ownership of knowledge. We are particularly interested in works that center Native American and Indigenous knowledges and scholars, including community-based and co-produced projects and that integrate such topics as data sovereignty, environmental contexts and food security, and the unsettling of academia and the status quo in archaeological practices.

The series will continue to feature geographical areas that have received less scholarly attention but promise exceptional growth potential in the coming decade. The series editors also seek innovative publication models to improve the accessibility of this series to Latin American colleagues and Native and Indigenous scholars throughout the Americas.

Amerind Studies in Anthropology

Amerind Studies in Anthropology is a series that publishes the results of the Amerind Seminars, annual professional symposia hosted by the Amerind Foundation in Dragoon, Arizona, and cosponsored by the Society for American Archaeology (SAA). Series titles that emerge from these symposia focus on timely topics like the analysis of regional archaeological sites, current issues in methodology and theory, and sweeping discussions of world phenomena such as warfare and cultural settlement patterns.

The Amerind Seminar review committee seeks proposals of broad anthropological interest that synthesize large and complex projects, bring together specialists across disciplines to address topics of mutual concern, or integrate the work of applied and academic scholars. To apply, please review the annual call for submissions at www.saa.org (all SAA symposia are eligible). For additional guidelines, contact the series editor or visit www.amerind.org.

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