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Meet the Research Team

Bianca Gendreau

Acting Senior Director, Research and Chief Curator

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Contemporary Canada and the World

Laura Sanchini

Acting Manager, Contemporary Canada

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Olivier Côté

Curator, Media and Communications

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Xavier Gélinas

Curator, Political History

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Judith Klassen

Curator, Cultural Expression

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James Trepanier

Curator, Post-Confederation Canada

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First Peoples and Early Canada

Jenny Ellison

Manager, Indigenous Peoples and Early Canada

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Matthew Betts

Curator, Eastern Archaeology

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Pierre Desrosiers

Curator, Central Archaeology

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Timothy P. Foran

Curator, British North America

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Salina Kemp

Curator, Eastern Ethnology

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Jean-Francois Lozier

Curator, French North America

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Kaitlin McCormick

Curator, Western Ethnology

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Katie Pollock

Curator, Central Ethnology

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Karen Ryan

Curator, Northern Canada

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Gabriel Yanicki

Curator, Western Archeology

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Janet Young

Curator, Physical Anthropology

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Repatriation and Indigenous Relations

John Moses

Director, Repatriation and Indigenous Relations

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Karen Albright Murchison

Collections Analyst, Repatriation

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Kelly Cameron

Supervisor, Repatriation

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Repatriation

The Canadian Museum of History develops and maintains collections to increase knowledge, appreciation and respect for cultural achievements in Canada and around the world. The Museum continues to develop collections to represent all of the peoples of Canada, and to make them accessible through as many avenues as possible.

The Canadian Museum of History continues to respond to requests from communities for repatriation. Most, but not all, of these requests have come from Aboriginal communities. A Human Remains Policy, that includes provision for repatriation of human remains to First Nations, was established by the Corporation in 1991.

In working with Aboriginal communities and individuals to resolve issues concerning repatriation, the Corporation is guided by the Museums Act (1990), the recommendations of the Task Force on First Peoples and Museums, jointly sponsored by the Assembly of First Nations and the Canadian Museums Association (1992), and the Canadian Museum of History Repatriation Policy (2001), which addresses both human remains and objects. Since the early 1990s the Museum of History has provided for repatriation through three main paths, response to requests received from First Nations, the Sacred Materials project (which provides First Nations with an opportunity to review collections held by the Corporation, identify objects requiring special care, and discuss repatriation, as required), and the treaty process.

Following discussion with the Aboriginal communities concerned, the Corporation has returned human remains to First Nations in several regions of Canada, wampum to the Six Nations Confederacy, and medicine bundles and other objects important to Plains communities. Through the treaty process the Corporation has reached repatriation agreements with the Nisga’a and the Labrador Inuit Association. The Nisga’a and the Corporation have also concluded a Custodial Arrangements Agreement that provides for shared possession on a rotating basis of objects of Nisga’a origin remaining in the Corporation’s collection.

Download Repatriation Policy PDF

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