"This volume brings a comprehensive perspective to the relationship between anthropology as practiced in museums and other sites of engaged anthropology. Christina Kreps makes a compelling argument for considering museum anthropology as applied work, in the best sense of the word. She highlights innovative practices that anthropologists and museum professionals are using currently to bring social and cultural issues to audiences not used to seeing them addressed in such distinctive ways. By putting current efforts at engagement into broader comparative and temporal context, she has constructed a text that will be useful to students in museum studies, anthropology theory and material culture studies." -Alaka Wali, Ph.D.; Curator of North American Anthropology; Field Museum, Chicago; Fellow, The Neubauer Collegium at University of Chicago"For many years, Christina Kreps has been at the forefront of developing an engaged museum anthropology. In this essential volume, Kreps takes her on-the-ground experiences across the globe and crafts them into sophisticated yet straightforward theoretical arguments about the past and future of museums. If you want to understand the intersections of museum work and applied anthropology, the rights of communities, or the possibilities of collaboration and the dangers of entrenched colonialism, then you’ll find this book vital and necessary reading." -Chip Colwell, Ph.D.; Senior Curator of Anthropology, Denver Museum of Nature & Science"This beautifully written and richly illustrated monograph is based on long-standing research, but is also up to date with the latest critical theory and academic debates, amounting to decades of thinking and writing directed to important issues central to museums, anthropology, and their relationships with communities." -Conal McCarthy, Victoria University of Wellington