“This book advances knowledge about the Ifugao landscape and Ifugao responses to European colonialism in the Philippines, and it is a groundbreaking contribution in its blend of research and community engagement through a participatory archaeology that involves Ifugao people and perspectives.” ―Christopher B. Rodning, co-editor of Fort San Juan and the Limits of Empire: Colonialism and Household Practice at the Berry Site. “Acabado and Martin provide a welcome addition to the literature on colonialism and archaeology in the early modern/modern world. The book is about decolonizing Indigenous landscapes and the habitus of Ifugao as they co-opted nonterritorial forms of governance. As an archaeology, it is particularly timely, giving complexity and nuance to aspirations and concerns, including collaborative research designs, ‘slow archaeology,’ and useable pasts.”―Mark W. Hauser, Northwestern University