Building a Bioarchaeology of Care

Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)

'Bioarchaeology of care' is a formal framework for analyzing cases of past caregiving in a contextualized and systematic manner. In bioarchaeology, health-related care is inferred from evidence in human remains that indicate survival with a disabling pathology when the individual would likely not have reached the actual age at death without care. Caregiving practices can potentially reveal a society's norms, values and beliefs. Additionally, caregiving can provide insights into societal knowledge, skills and experiences as well as political, economic, social and environmental variables. Despite its potential for providing a window into such aspects of past behavior, caregiving has been neglected as a topic for archaeological research. To alleviate this problem the Index of Care was created as an on-line instrument supporting application of a bioarchaeology of care methodology. Building a Bioarchaeology of Care consists of perspectives from three continents for developing theory and practice into a cohesive framework. Presenters will discuss the possibilities and pitfalls for Index of Care use, explore approaches for integrating care analysis in other areas of archaeology (e.g. mummification literature in context of caregiving), identify new directions for research, and propose strategies for communicating findings and stimulating debate.

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-15 of 15)

  • Documents (15)

Documents
  1. The Bioarchaeological Evidence for Elder Care in Roman Britain (2015)
  2. Cared for or Outcasts? The bioarchaeological analysis of two individuals with potential disabilities from Aztec Ruins (2015)
  3. Caring for Bodies or Simply Saving Souls: the emergence of institutional care in Spanish Colonial America (2015)
  4. Digitised Diseases: seeing beyond the specimen, understanding disease and disability in the past (2015)
  5. Making the Bioarchaeology of Care Methodology Public: Understanding the Roles of Ethics, Communication and Public Engagement in a Novel Approach to Physical Impairment in the Archaeological Record. (2015)
  6. MODELING CARE IN PREHISTORY THROUGH AN ANALYSIS OF HUNTER-GATHERERS SOCIAL SYSTEMS. (2015)
  7. Mummy studies and the soft tissue evidence of care (2015)
  8. Narrativizing a Bioarchaeology of Care: A Case Study from Ancient Dilmun (2015)
  9. A Post-Mortem Evaluation of the Degree of Mobility in an Individual with Severe Kyphoscoliosis Using Direct Digital Radiography (DR) and Multi-Detector Computed Tomography (MDCT) (2015)
  10. The potential and challenges of constructing a bioarchaeology of care for a person with leprosy in the late medieval period (2015)
  11. Potential Applications of the Bioarchaeology of Care Methodological Approach for Historic Institutionalized Populations (2015)
  12. Surviving Trepanation: Approaching the Relationship of Violence and the Care of "War Wounds" through a Case Study from Prehistoric Peru (2015)
  13. THINKING AND THEORY IN THE BIOARCHAEOLOGY OF CARE (2015)
  14. Using the Index of Care on a Bronze Age Teenager with Poliomyelitis: From Speculation to Strong Inference (2015)
  15. What moral and ethical considerations should inform bioarchaeology of care analysis? (2015)