Scientific Consequentialism: Potential Problems with an Outcome-Driven Form of Indigenous Archaeology

“Scientific consequentialism” is the position that the rightness and wrongness of scientific research and reporting is determined by its effects on individuals or groups, rather than by its adherence to the ideals of the scientific method. Indigenous archaeology asserts that archaeology ought to be performed “with, by, and for” indigenous peoples, and in its reasonable form, Indigenous archaeology is important to making Western science more respectful of Indigenous concerns and more applicable to studying peoples with metaphysically inclusive worldviews. However, some proponents advocate for an extreme, consequentialist form of “for” which seeks to limit scientists to research and results that serve and benefit Indigenous peoples’ social and political interests. This may include suppressing undesirable research or results, manipulating scientists or the scientific process, and avoiding research into certain subjects, all of which are presented as morally required efforts toward “the good” of decolonization. This extreme, outcome-driven form of Indigenous archaeology is irreconcilable with and even antithetical to the ideals of Western science, risks unintended negative consequences over the long term, and is no more appropriate now to support decolonial agendas than were consequentialist efforts in the past to support colonial agendas.


Introduction
Ethical consequentialism asserts that the rightness and wrongness of actions are How to cite this paper: Williams, D.H. and Shipley, G.P. (2020). Scientific Consequentialism: Potential Problems with an Outcome-Driven Form of Indigenous Archaeo-determined by their effects with regard to achieving some standard of "the good" (e.g., happiness). Scientific research is an action and is therefore subject to consequentialist evaluation based on its effects on individuals or groups. Deontology is the primary alternative to consequentialism, and it asserts that actions are right insofar as actors (e.g., scientists) adhere to their duty to some ideal and wrong otherwise, regardless of the consequences. Most scientists follow a deontological paradigm in that they attempt to adhere as much as possible to the ideals of the scientific method and accept the results without regard to the potential effects.
In Western culture, science and scientists are highly respected and the ethical foundation of the modern scientific endeavor is largely unquestioned. In at least some social science disciplines, however, there is a growing push for scientific consequentialism. In archaeology, for example, there is growing support for "Indigenous archaeology" which asserts that archaeology ought to be performed "with, by, and for" Indigenous peoples in order to do less harm and provide greater benefits. The limits of "with, by, and for" are still evolving, and while the literature includes "win-win" examples in which Indigenous peoples work closely with scientists and willingly contribute to, greatly enhance, and benefit from research, there is little discussion of more problematic situations in which Indigenous peoples reject research or results which may negatively affect their social or political interests.
On the one hand, we agree that the scientific process far too often ignores the concerns of and effects on its subjects and other stakeholders, and would be improved by increased communication and collaboration. Elsewhere, we have discussed the limitations of the Western scientific worldview for the study of metaphysically inclusive peoples, and identified Indigenous archaeology as a useful approach for overcoming at least some of those limitations (Shipley & Williams, 2019). On the other hand, we believe that these efforts can be taken too far. Some proponents of Indigenous archaeology seem to advocate for an extreme, consequentialist form of "for" which seeks to limit scientists to research and results that serve and benefit Indigenous peoples' social and political interests. This may include suppressing undesirable research or results, manipulating scientists or the scientific process, and avoiding research into certain subjects, all of which are presented as morally required efforts toward "the good" of decolonization. While well-intended, such an outcome-driven paradigm to further Indigenous interests is ethically indistinguishable from past efforts to manipulate scientific research and results to further colonial interests and "the (then) good" of colonization.
This paper examines the rise of scientific consequentialism and potential problems with this extreme, outcome-driven form of Indigenous archaeology. Our presentation necessarily includes a number of problematic quotes from the literature which gave rise to our concern. To the obvious criticism that we have taken these quotes out of context to make our case, we respond that no context can make them reasonable and the writers should have been more thoughtful in Archaeological Discovery crafting the language they used to express their positions. In its extreme form, Indigenous archaeology is irreconcilable with and even antithetical to the ideals of Western science, and we conclude that such manipulation risks unintended negative consequences over the long term and is no more appropriate now to support decolonial agendas than it was in the past to support colonial agendas.

Archaeology as a Colonial Endeavor
Archaeology emerged as an aspect of a larger colonial desire to conquer unknown worlds (Smith & Jackson, 2006). Artifacts provided proof of conquest, and the subjugation of Indigenous cultures through research and representation was a manifestation of colonial control (Smith & Jackson, 2006). Modern archaeology inherited this deeply colonial legacy (Atalay, 2006;Smith & Jackson, 2006). Indigenous peoples have often been at odds with archaeologists over their relationship and about who should have control over research questions and designs, how data should be interpreted and used, and how ancestors and their communities should be represented (Watkins, 2003). Due to Western society's emphasis on formal education and the authority of scientists, archaeologists are considered to have knowledge that is somehow beyond the understanding of nonscientists, and so they assume final authority with regard to the archaeological record (Watkins, 2003). As a result, "members of descendant communities often feel powerless about what happens to their ancestors and the archaeological sites associated with them", and they perceive archaeologists to be arrogant and insensitive, even as archaeologists perceive them to be antagonistic toward research (Watkins, 2003: p. 273).
An example of the ongoing colonial perspective in archaeology is the pervasive negative characterization and treatment of the oral histories of Indigenous peoples. Many archaeologists are reluctant to share power and authority over how the past is studied and represented (Watkins, 2003), and this is manifested in their dismissal of Indigenous knowledge (Steeves, 2015). Written histories are viewed as detached, objective, and reliable, while oral histories are viewed as changeable, subjective, and unreliable and have little or no value in the Western scientific worldview (Smith & Jackson, 2006). This scientific colonialism-this failure to include Indigenous peoples as equals in the stewardship of their own past-excludes them from discourse that is ultimately about them (Watkins, 2003).
As long as Indigenous peoples are treated not as research partners but as "objects" of scientific inquiry under policies that privilege Western ontology and epistemology, the scientific study of Indigenous peoples will continue to be a colonial and conflict-laden endeavor. "[F]undamental differences in epistemology must be acknowledged in order to truly understand the conflicts between scientists and indigenous peoples" (Tsosie, 2015(Tsosie, : p. 1140. Western science and Native American spirituality must be balanced in a way that recognizes the validity of both, and in order to achieve that balance, "archaeology must accept the validity of Native American spiritual beliefs and practices, particularly with re-

Indigenous Archaeology
By the mid-twentieth century, Indigenous people's protests over the excavation, collection, and display of their cultural and ancestral remains by archaeologists and their demands to have more control over their own heritage could no longer be ignored, and archaeology was forced to begin examining its interactions and relationships with Indigenous peoples (Atalay, 2006). Increasing self-reflection along with the influence of postmodernism led to the recognition that archaeology, like most human endeavors, is strongly shaped by the social and political contexts in which it is practiced (Atalay, 2006). Today, debate continues over the injustices of research practices that do not benefit Indigenous peoples and that exploit these remains, and over the larger question of who should have the power to speak for and write the stories of the past (Atalay, 2006). Because archaeology supported or, at least, was used to support many of the stereotypes of colonialism, "Indigenous peoples have a right to expect archaeologists to assist with the decolonization of archaeology" (Smith & Jackson, 2006: p. 312). Just as colonialism violently transformed and erased the identities of Indigenous peoples, decolonizing knowledge production must work to un-erase them (Steeves, 2015). In that light, "[t]he trajectory of Indigenist research is clearly focused on directions of decolonizing, re-writing, re-claiming, and self-determination along paths of 'post-colonial' healing in a 'neo-colonial' world" (Steeves, 2015: p. v). This includes finding ways to create counter-discourses that challenge the colonialist and imperialist interpretations of the past (Atalay, 2006).
Indigenous archaeology arose and continues to evolve as a response to postcolonial critiques of archaeological practices, particularly the privileging of Western perspectives (McNiven, 2016). It has emerged as a new form of archaeology that is informed by Indigenous values and agendas (Wobst, 2010) and that "is in synch with and contributes to the goals, aims, hopes, and curiosities of the communities whose past and heritage are under study, using methods and practices that are harmonious with their own worldviews, traditional knowledges, and lifeways" (Atalay, 2006: p. 284; see also Nicholas, 2008). In actual practice, Indigenous archaeology can mean different things, and what is considered Indigenous archaeology in one region might not be applicable to other regions (Watkins, 2010). Thus, because Indigenous archaeology is a broad approach that can be applied in different ways, it may be better conceived of as Indigenous archaeologies (Colwell-Chanthaphonh et al., 2010). peoples (see, e.g., Atalay, 2006;Colwell-Chanthaphonh et al., 2010;Nicholas, 2001;Nicholas & Andrews, 1997;Silliman, 2010citing Nicholas, 2008. Archaeology "with" Indigenous peoples involves close collaboration, and gives Indigenous stakeholders a voice in how the work is performed (Silliman, 2010).
Archaeology "by" Indigenous peoples introduces much needed diversity into the discipline by encouraging participation, providing support for educational and career paths, recognizing sovereignty, prioritizing community, and respecting their knowledge and concerns about history (Silliman, 2010). Archaeology "by" Indigenous scholars and communities is research in which they have power and are in control of the design and interpretations, and in which "research is a ceremony" with the purpose of raising consciousness and developing insight into the world (Wilson, 2008: p. 11). Archaeology "for" Indigenous peoples ensures that research projects acknowledge and address the troubled history of archaeology's treatment of Indigenous peoples, including by telling useful, respectful, and peopled histories that resonate with communities' senses of themselves and their particular needs (Silliman, 2010).
Decolonizing archaeology involves accepting alternative ways of viewing the past as equally valuable and legitimate ways of knowing (Atalay, 2006). Further, Indigenous discourse challenges academic hegemony and its privileging of non-Indigenous written sources in knowledge production of the Indigenous past to accept oral histories as valid data (Steeves, 2015). Adding Indigenous perspectives to our understanding of the past is essential to decolonizing narratives and minds (Steeves, 2015) and creating a more representative past (Nicholas, 2001).
So for many Indigenous scholars, methodology begins with a study of relevant oral traditions (Steeves, 2015). "This need not undermine archaeology's commitments to studying parts of the past in rigorous and scientific ways, nor must it produce 'proprietary histories', particularly when done collaboratively" (Silliman, 2010: p. 218). In this manner, Indigenous archaeology seeks to achieve a more respectful dialogue between various stakeholders, of which archaeologists are only one (Silliman, 2010).
Watkins (2010) discussed the positive impact of Indigenous archaeology on several areas of archaeological practice. Indigenous archaeology can provide relational benefits in that it allows archaeologists to improve relationships with stakeholders, because "the more we include local and Indigenous perspectives within our research, the more we create support for what we do" (Watkins, 2010: pp. 54-55). Indigenous archaeology can also have an operational impact in that as archaeologists include more stakeholders they relinquish some control over the way in which archaeology is practiced. While the process will be changed, the sharing of information and the gathering of alternative perspectives will expand and benefit archaeology rather than harm it: Generally speaking, we will give up portions of our control over the archaeological record. We will sometimes be forced to ask permission to operate within arenas that previously we took as our own. We will have personality conflicts and programmatic lapses. We will shake our heads at interpretations and representations, but I believe archaeology will survive and become stronger (Watkins, 2010: p. 58).
In response to archaeologists who argue that the discipline should try to remain more objective, Watkins noted that archaeology never has been and never can be completely apolitical or neutral. If archaeologists continue to insulate themselves from stakeholders who see themselves as the social, political, or cultural stewards of the archaeological record or cultural heritage, then archaeology will continue to be a sterile act serving only the needs of one group of people as a handmaiden of colonialism (Watkins, 2010). Having said that, Indigenous archaeology is not meant to replace scientific archaeology but to add to archaeology's interpretative power (Watkins, 2010). For example, archaeologists tend to focus on the physical, technological, and esoteric attributes of artifacts, while Indigenous peoples are often more interested in the ceremonial and social importance of the same artifacts, so Indigenous archaeology attempts to consider all of these aspects of artifacts and thereby serve the needs of all stakeholders (Watkins, 2005).

Critical Debate of Indigenous Archaeology
McGhee (2008) raised the concern that Indigenous archaeology is based on Aboriginal essentialism ("Aboriginalism") and the notion that Indigenous peoples possess fundamentally different qualities from non-Indigenous peoples. McGhee (2008: p. 581) also asserted that some proponents seek "to appease Indigenous opposition by incorporating non-Western values and perspectives as sources and methods of investigation, or by explicitly aligning their efforts with the historical interests of specific communities or groups". Such efforts are not only theoretically unsound, but can be harmful both to archaeology and to Indigenous communities, and they allow Indigenous peoples to assert exclusive rights over knowledge that are not available to non-Indigenous peoples (McGhee, 2008).
McGhee (2008: p. 582) characterized proponents as viewing archaeology as being "an instrument of a coercive state", and as serving "to deprive Indigenous peoples of their right to define their own place in the modern world, and [as] an effective weapon of assimilation to mainstream cultures". For example, Custer (2005: p. 3) asserted that "archaeologists have created a thought world which serves to support their own power and privilege, harms the interests of American Indian people, and aids the ongoing cultural genocide focused on Native Americans". Because traditional archaeology is characterized in such extreme terms, anyone attempting to question the concept of Indigenous archaeology is by implication unethical or even criminal (McGhee, 2008). The proposed solution is to "depart radically from the practice of archaeology as an academic and heritage management discipline" (McGhee, 2008: p. 591). For example: Some (Custer, 2005) argue that archaeology can be practiced with a clear con- McGhee is not alone in questioning such extreme positions. Kuper (2003: p. 400) noted that if anthropologists become "the academic wing of the indigenous rights movement" then their works will be worthless except as propaganda. Trigger (1997: p. x) warned that "[f]or archaeologists to take sides in political issues of this sort risks interference in Native life that may be scarcely less patronizing than the interference of Indian agents and missionaries was in the past".
Smith (2004)  seek to interrogate, repair, and hopefully move beyond the colonial origins of the discipline and its treatment of Native people". Silliman asserted that Indigenous archaeology attempts to mitigate the negative effects of archaeological practice on the living descendants of subject communities and also attempts to benefit from those descendants' contributions to knowledge of the past. It does this "simultaneously, successfully, and rigorously without 'strip[ping] archaeology of the scientific attributes that make it a particularly powerful narrator of the past'" (Silliman, 2010: p. 218, quoting McGhee, 2008).

The Extreme Form of "For"
We disagree with those who reject even the more reasonable form and positive aspects of Indigenous archaeology, and we disagree with those who reject the fact that the Indigenous worldview differs from the Western scientific worldview. Our criticism is not of Indigenous archaeology in general, the benefits of which we think are obvious, but of an extreme, outcome-driven form which seems to involve not the integration of views or equalization of power but merely a transfer of privilege and power: If colonialism has meant Indigenous peoples living within a framework of non-Indigenous control, the decolonization of archaeology has to involve archaeologists working within a framework of Indigenous control … Given that differential access to power is at the core of colonial relations, it follows that the decolonization of Indigenous archaeology involves a rethinking of power relations between archaeologists and Indigenous peoples. It must involve a movement from the colonial assumption of a right to acquire knowledge to recognition of Indigenous peoples' rights to protect their cultural and intellectual property and to share knowledge on their own terms (Smith & Jackson, 2006: p. 341, emphasis added).
In its more reasonable form, Indigenous archaeology prioritizes research that is relevant to Indigenous peoples, but in its more extreme form, it requires that research "benefit" them. For example, Steeves (2015: p. 29) claimed that "[m]any Indigenous people believe that knowledge gathered as a practice of gathering is a waste of time", which reflects the notion of relevance, but Louis (2007) went further and asserted that research that does not benefit the community and extend the quality of life of its members should not be done. The requirement to benefit already implicates scientific consequentialism, but some have argued that scientific research that is "for" Indigenous peoples should have the consequence of furthering the social and political interests of Indigenous peoples. For example, Ucko (2001: p. 1) noted a lack of awareness in the discipline "of the socio-political contexts of the practice and nature of archaeology in all parts of the world". In particular: [Archaeologists] bring consequences to the societies involved which may be far removed from that initially assumed by the archaeologist … [I]t behooves archaeologists to understand how knowledge of the past, and of the present of "Others", not only plays a part in the social, political, and economic relations of people in the present, but will undoubtedly also do so in the future (Ucko, 2001: pp. 8-9, emphasis added).
Ucko (2001) did not expressly call for avoiding certain consequences or pursuing others, but it is implicit in his call to understand that research has consequences that some action should follow based on that understanding.
According to Nicholas (2001), Australian archaeologists who wish to perform research on the lands of Indigenous peoples must not only obtain permission but may have to relinquish certain rights to their research results. "While the initial reactions of prospective researchers are often negative, the reality is that the provisions are ones that most can abide, with little if any real restrictions on what they would have done otherwise" (Nicholas, 2001: p. 36 Duran (2006: pp. 15-16) referred to as the "soulwounds" (i.e., intergenerational traumas) of Indigenous peoples, including "identity erasure, created in part through archaeologically cleaved links to ancestral places and times due to colonization". Rigney (1999: pp. 117-118, emphasis added) brazenly asserted that research should "serve and inform the political liberation struggle", and "it must be overtly political". Even Atalay (2006: p. 296, emphasis added) seemed to accept that the extreme form of Indigenous archaeology involves transferring power from one stakeholder to another: If in working to de-center some of the problematic aspects of Western archaeological practice, are we then advocating for destroying one power struc-ture (a Western one) to simply replace it with another, Indigenous-centered one? I ask this question because of a recent dialogue I had on this topic in which by suggesting the de-centering of Western concepts in order to center Indigenous views, I was labeled a "colonist", someone who was doing nothing different than what Western scholars had done before me (i.e., forcing my Indigenous worldview onto others) … [W]e must sometimes use the master's tools … to create a counter-discourse to Western approaches that have consistently worked to destroy or silence our Indigenous ways of knowing.
If "archaeological and historical data are not merely neutral pieces of informa-

Examples of Potential Problems with Scientific Consequentialism
The extreme, outcome-driven form of Indigenous archaeology seems to require that scientific research and results have the effect of furthering Indigenous peoples' social and political interests. Of course, it would be difficult or impossible to know of research that has actually been suppressed, manipulated, or avoided, but the following examples show how strong the pressure of scientific consequentialism can be in at least attempting to suppress undesirable research or results, manipulate scientists and the scientific process, and altogether avoid research into certain subjects.

Suppressing Undesirable Research or Results
It seems unlikely that many Native Americans desire to know whether their ancestors practiced cannibalism, and the knowledge is unlikely to benefit them and could undermine their interests. Therefore, presumably either such research   (Billman, Lambert, & Leonard, 2000: p. 146).
However, some associate the assertion of cannibalism with the charge of "savagery", which historically was used to differentiate the uncivilized "other" and legitimize treating "them" as inferior (Arens, 1979). Dongoske, Martin, and Ferguson (2000: p. 180) asserted that the word "cannibalism" "carries some very heavy historical and emotional baggage", including helping "to ideologically pave the way for the eventual campaign of conquest, Christianization, and genocide that followed" (citing Barreiro, 1992: p. 35, but failing to acknowledge that Barreiro admitted that cannibalism did occur). Kilgour (1998: p. 240) similarly asserted that cannibalism was a symbol of the tools of oppression used by a guilty imperial past, "be it the British empire or the empire of anthropology", and Arens (1979) claimed that much of the literature on cannibalism is a meta-myth created as a means of boundary definition in the construction of Western identity.
"These matters are not merely historical or theoretical: Indians must contend with negative stereotypes every day, in every arena of their lives. So … claims for cannibalism must seem like one more attempt to denigrate Indians" (Morrow & Lekson, 1999: p. 6). Even if the assertions are made by disinterested scientists based on objective evidence, they may be picked up and used by others to support racist positions (Morrow & Lekson, 1999). Thus, "any characterization of Indians as 'cannibals' dredges up a long history of oppression and racism, and we have to realize that this may generate ill-will and negative emotions about archaeology in many descendant communities" (Dongoske, Martin, & Ferguson, 2000: p. 180 adherence to scientific protocol is needed", but then claimed that they do "a different kind of science, one that is inclusive of a number of different points of views and perspectives" (Dongoske, Martin, & Ferguson, 2000: p. 189, emphasis added). Ultimately, their concern was not whether past peoples actually engaged in cannibalism, but rather the potential consequences to modern peoples and their interests of openly acknowledging it: Needless to say, the appropriation of the Cowboy Wash study by the popular press in complete disregard of the descendant communities was a damaging set back to all of us working in the Southwest. We know because many of our Native American colleagues have told us so … We also are concerned with how allegations of cannibalism in the popular press affect contemporary Native Americans … Historically, science and archaeology have been used to denigrate and dehumanize Native Americans, justifying the taking of land and the perception of Native American cultures as static and destined for extinction … We think the sensationalistic approach to reporting claims of cannibalism inadvertently encourage racist views in American society (Dongoske, Martin, & Ferguson, 2000: p. 188).

Manipulating the Scientific Process
Origin is a key qualitative distinction between the Indigenous and the colonial, and is often argued as a basis for the former's claims against the latter. Therefore, Indigenous peoples' assertions of originating in the Americas, or, at least, arriving much earlier than Europeans, presumably would be supported under the extreme, consequentialist form of Indigenous archaeology. For example, Deloria (1995: p. 84, emphasis in original) claimed that "[b]y making us immigrants to North America, [scientists] are able to deny the fact that we were the full, complete, and total owners of this continent … and therefore throw back at us the accusation that we had simply found North America a little earlier than they had". Deloria (1992: p. 597, emphasis added) further argued that Native Americans will never be accorded full humanity until and unless they "are in some way connected with world history as early peoples, perhaps even as refugees from Old World turmoils and persecutions. We cannot be primitive peoples who were suddenly discovered half a millennium ago. The image and interpretation are all wrong … " Thus, accepting that Indigenous peoples have been in the Western Hemisphere for over 60,000 years and possibly over 100,000 years puts them on equal footing with other peoples (Steeves, 2015). Establishing such a long tenure is important because it "impacts the social and political lives of contemporary people" (Steeves, 2015: p. 4, citing Gnecco, 2011 by solidifying their claims to Indigeneity and supporting Indigenous ownership of their past, their culture, and their lands (McNiven & Russell, 2005;Steeves, 2015).
With that in mind, Steeves (2015) argued for a pre-Clovis, deep-time entry or DOI: 10.4236/ad.2020.81004 76 Archaeological Discovery outright origin of Natives in the Americas based on a number of controversial sites. Steeves (2015: pp. 76-77) referred to the Clovis First hypothesis, which was, at the time, the consensus hypothesis for the peopling of the Americas, as "the greatest myth ever told". Adovasio and Page (2002: p. xviii) similarly characterized it as "not logical" and "more like religious dogma". Steeves asserted that this myth was only able to become so deeply embedded in the dominant discourse because archaeologists delegitimized and erased the true Indigenous histories. Steeves (2015: p. 27) embraced Deloria's politicized approach to the issue and suggested that the claim of a more recent origin is nothing more than a deliberate attempt "to erase or marginalize the historical identities or even the historical presence of various groups whose historical consciousness may lead to claims to land, resources, and distinctive identities, all substantive challenges to colonial ownership, privilege, and production of historical knowledge". In an open attempt to coerce researchers, Steeves (2015: p. iv, emphasis added) argued that to deny an ancient tenure in the Americas is to commit a violence against Native Americans, and that "archaeology has an ethical and moral duty to un-erase histories and identities that its academic predecessors erased through violent discursive processes of knowledge production". Ironically, Clovis First is no longer the consensus hypothesis as somewhat older sites are now generally accepted (see, e.g., Waters & Stafford, 2014), but this shift occurred because science stayed true to its ideals and worked properly to self-correct by continually considering new and reconsidering old evidence, not because Steeves had successfully coerced them into accepting an unsupported position (and, importantly, the now generally accepted pre-Clovis sites are still nowhere near the age required to support Steeves' position).

Avoiding Research into Certain Subjects
As discussed, long tenure would strengthen arguments for claims to the Western hemisphere as well as for more specific claims to tribal lands. Evidence of a shorter tenure or, alternatively, the long-term presence of non-Native Americans could weaken those claims. Therefore, Indigenous peoples' demands not to conduct research which might produce such undesirable evidence presumably would be respected under the extreme, consequentialist form of Indigenous archaeology. The case of "Kennewick Man" illustrates how adversarial the conflict between scientists and Indigenous peoples can become and both why a reasonable form of Indigenous archaeology is needed and why an extreme form must be avoided.
Human remains were discovered on federal land, and nearby tribes claimed a relationship with the individual, which they referred to as the "Ancient One", and demanded that the remains be reburied without being studied. Agreeing with the tribes and applying the Native American Graves Protection and Repa- stressed that the relevant text is written in the present tense, and therefore the law requires that human remains bear a relationship to a presently existing tribe, people, or culture in order to be considered Native American, and there was insufficient evidence that the remains at issue were related to any current tribe.
The court concluded that the remains should be transferred to the scientists who could proceed to study them under ARPA. Genetic testing failed to show that the remains belonged to a non-Native American, and the remains were ultimately transferred to and reburied by the tribes.
According to the Committee on Repatriation (1998) of the Society for American Archaeology (SAA), NAGPRA was intended to balance conflicting scientific and tribal interests. Goold & Fanelli (2000;, attorneys for the SAA, characterized this during litigation as "NAGPRA was intended to reasonably balance Native American interests in human remains and cultural items with those of the scientific community and the broader public", which goes even further in aligning the scientific and general public's interests against those of Native Americans. Barran & Schneider (2001), attorneys for the scientists, made a number of incendiary legal arguments, including, for example, that the Wanapum tribe, which was part of the coalition, was not properly an "Indian tribe" because it was not federally recognized. They also argued for standards of affiliation which Native Americans would never be able to meet, including that determining "group identity" would require knowing the language, religious practices and customs, and interactions between groups thousands of years ago. They also argued that oral histories "are unstable over time and are not inherently reliable explanations of distant past events", and that the tribes "improperly used religious beliefs as proof of prehistoric events, and as a basis for denying [scientists] access to the skeleton, the discovery site, and government-held information" (Barran & Schneider, 2001: p. 1, p. 12). They even went so far as to assert that oral histories that have metaphysical content cannot be used as evidence of past events without violating the U.S. Constitution, arguing: Defendants hopelessly confused cultural information with religious beliefs … Defendants repeatedly link religious stories with historical events, all in an effort to show that those religious beliefs point to a prehistory that is "true" for purposes of cultural affiliation. To use religious belief for such purposes violates the Establishment Clause (Barran & Schneider, 2001: pp. 25-26).
In critiquing the case, Tsosie (2015) noted that the process was fraught with epistemic injustice. The courts were reluctant to acknowledge the harms asserted by the tribes but were fully accepting of the harms to scientific discovery and the public interest asserted by the scientists. The evidence offered by the tribes was discarded as religious mythology while the evidence offered by the scientists was fully respected, which "effectively reduces the Indigenous peoples to the status of religious zealots" (Tsosie, 2015(Tsosie, : p. 1186). Writing on the broader issue of establishing cultural affiliation as a requirement for repatriation, Dumont (2011: p. 6) rejected the argument that Native American claims interfere with scientists' ability to represent "American interests" (and the implicit assertion that Native Americans are not Americans), and noted that "Native peoples continue to struggle with an entrenched assumption of colonial prerogative among American physical anthropologists and archaeologists". Thus, the Kennewick case illustrates the need for Indigenous archaeology and better relations between scientists and Indigenous peoples.
However, although the tribes' actual arguments were based largely on avoiding the desecration of remains belonging to an individual they believed to be their ancestor, the social and political issues of origins and claims to land were clearly present (Goldberg, 2006). As mentioned, Nicholas (2001) has admitted that there is a strong desire by some Indigenous peoples to use the archaeological record to support land claims. At least one commentator speculated that "the tribes fight against further testing of Kennewick Man is based largely on fear, fear that if someone else was here before they were, their status as sovereign nations and all that comes with it-treaty rights and lucrative casinos, like this one on the Umatilla Reservation-could be at risk" (Stahl, 2012, characterizing the position of James Chatters).

Conclusion
Certainly, the scientific endeavor would be greatly improved by increased communication and collaboration with and, perhaps most importantly, respect for all of its stakeholders. We support the goals of Indigenous archaeology to perform research that is "with", "by", and (in its reasonable form) "for" Indigenous peoples. However, there is great danger in extreme efforts to manipulate scientists and science to further social and political agendas and "the good" of decolonization. While well-intended, such an outcome-driven paradigm to further Indigenous interests is antithetical to and irreconcilable with the ideals of Western science, and is no more appropriate now to support counter-colonial agendas than it was in the past to support colonial agendas. Many of the historical examples relied upon by those attacking archaeology and other anthropological disciplines were ultimately rectified not by abandoning the ideals of Western science as unachievable but by intensifying efforts to more faithfully achieve and subjectivity into their research at every stage, but, over time, the consensus-seeking process works to correct much that results from individual weakness.
The misuse of science by colonials in the past should not become a justification for misusing it by or on behalf of Indigenous peoples in the present. Nevertheless, for Smith & Jackson (2006: p. 341, emphasis added), the solution involves not an equalization but merely a transfer of control of the research process: "If colonialism has meant Indigenous peoples living within a framework of non-Indigenous control, the decolonization of archaeology has to involve archaeologists working within a framework of Indigenous control". So too for Custer (2005), and for McNiven & Russell (2005: p. 236, emphasis added), who asserted that Indigenous communities "have every right to control archaeological research in whatever way they wish". For Steeves (2015: p 45, p. 85, emphasis added), "Political control of cultural information is critical to the survival and protection of Indigenous peoples' rights and sovereignty". For Smith & Jackson (2006: p. 339) this means that Indigenous peoples "own" and have the exclusive right to determine how it is researched and reported, without regard to their motivations for exercising such control. For Nicholas (2001: p. 30), it seems to mean avoiding or suppressing research that "threatens the integrity of the [Indigenous] worldview and beliefs".
The slippery slope of scientific consequentialism is further manifested by a new extreme form of public archaeology which seeks to "make archaeology po- Archaeology, being a human endeavor, will always suffer from imperfect objectivity. The response of extreme consequentialists is to abandon objectivity altogether and openly embrace subjectivity, but this response reflects the logical fallacy of the perfect solution (i.e., if we cannot achieve perfect objectivity, then there is no point in pursuing objectivity at all). Using archaeology to promote preferred agendas or ideologies has emotional appeal, but will only undermine overall respect for the discipline and trust in its results. While scientists can be advocates for positions derived from their research and results, they cannot let their personal preferences dictate their research or results or else they stop being