Cultural Resources Management
The Cultural Resources Management graduate certificate: 1) focuses on the benefits of public archaeology as expressed through modern compliance work and how CRM intersects heritage, cultural rights, research, preservation, resource use, and public education; 2) is committed to instilling an ethical approach to working with diverse stakeholder communities while serving as stewards for the archaeological record; and, 3) is oriented towards balancing the practical skills necessary to be a successful CRM practitioner with the theoretical understanding of why it is important to conduct CRM in the first place.
Courses
- ANTH515 — Deciphering Data
- ANTH530 — Research Methods in Archaeology
- ANTH531 — Laboratory Methods in Archaeology
- ANTH532 — North American Archaeology
- ANTH533 — Archaeology of the Upper Midwest
- ANTH547 — Essentials of Forensic Anthropology
- ANTH550 — Ethnographic Research Methods
- ANTH563 — Seminar
- ANTH588 — Professional Workshop/Continuing Education
- ANTH592 — Field Research in Anthropology
- ANTH600 — Graduate Research or Scholarly Activity
- ANTH630 — Proseminar in Archaeology
- ANTH631 — Cultural Resource Management I
- ANTH632 — Cultural Resource Management II
- ANTH640 — Proseminar in Biological Anthropology
- ANTH650 — Proseminar in Cultural Anthropology