Francesco Orlandi

@unimc.it

Fellow in Critical Heritage Studies and Public Archaeology
University of Macerata

Francesco Orlandi

RESEARCH, TEACHING, or OTHER INTERESTS

Anthropology, History and Philosophy of Science, Archeology, Cultural Studies
7

Scopus Publications

32

Scholar Citations

4

Scholar h-index

Scopus Publications

  • Heritage Cosmopolitics and the Contemporary Past of the Southcentral Andes
    Francesco Orlandi
    One World Archaeology, 2026
  • Archaeological Ethnography of Indigenous Heritage Rights: Emergent Realities around the Petroglyph of the ‘Chiqui’ in Amaicha del Valle (NW Argentina)
    Francesco Orlandi
    Archaeologies, 2025
    This article aims to contribute to an ethical and post-disciplinary reflection in indigenous and postcolonial archaeologies. Adopting the relational perspective of political ontology unravels the complexities behind the seemingly superficial conflicts over the interpretation of a piece of rock art and the failed implementation of the solar energy project in the Indigenous Community Amaicha del Valle. The juxtaposition of state-authorised and place-based narratives and political actions brings to the fore conflicting perspectives of heritage, rights and indigeneity. Through ethnohistorical and early archaeological accounts from the Calchaquí Valleys, the research reveals the epistemic disavowal of Indigenous histories and lifeworlds as the Argentine state established its national sovereignty and development models between the late nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries. The case study also draws on archaeological ethnography to highlight generative spaces of knowledge and articulation across divergence and materiality, and that conflicting heritage ontologies can generate new cultural-political forms that diverge from the established consensus.
  • Fence and friction at Tiwanaku (Bolivia): An archaeological ethnography of heritage, indigeneity and rights
    Francesco Orlandi
    History and Anthropology, 2025
    The article investigates diverging heritage practices in plurinational Bolivia. It draws on the Aymara concept of taypi to address heritage conflicts from a cosmopolitical perspective on memory and territoriality. Place-based histories and socio-material assemblages redefine Indigenous heritage as a multi-temporal meeting ground between state, local communities and more-than-human-beings.
  • Introduction - The heritage and decoloniality nexus: Global exchanges and unresolved questions in sedimented landscapes of injustice
    Marisa Lazzari, Peter Bille Larsen, Francesco Orlandi
    American Anthropologist, 2024
    More than ever, heritage narratives, policies, and objects are being questioned because of the colonial legacies that still permeate public spaces (e.g., Knudsen et al., 2022). From the eruption of protests and claims to heritage objects, places, and monuments in former colonial powers, to the emergence of Indigenous peoples’ heritage curatorship of land, and resources activism, new efforts are challenging racialized social orders and persistent exclusionary regimes. Protests echo long-running questions about social structure, voice, and ability to shape lives and the future, linking heritage to broader questions of rights, resources, and redistribution. Both academic scholarship and grassroots politics prompt us to interrogate the entrenched politics of representation, socio-material interactions, and the unfinished business of decolonizing heritage institutions and practices. This conversation started within the framework of a networking seed grant project promoted by the University of Geneva and the University of Exeter.1 The project aimed to broaden the conversation on the intersections of cultural heritage, identity, and landscape sustainability by bringing together scholars addressing different configurations of heritage regimes, discourses, and practices from various regions of the world (Figure 1). Focusing on the connections, as well as contradictions, that characterize social spaces caught up between local and global policies and practices, this led to a powerful interdisciplinary and comparative outlook on the complexities of decoloniality. The anthropologically informed multiregional focus enabled us to explore the entanglements between place-based research, long-term practices of inhabiting and remembering, and the transnational valuations and expectations underpinning official heritage management (see Dominguez, 2017). The complexity of “authorized heritage discourse,” as originally defined by Smith (2006), is arguably augmented in contemporary frictional spaces of developmentalism, from the widening of global extractive frontiers on natural, cultural, and intellectual materials, to the spaces into which Indigenous peoples and ethnic or rural minorities are pressured to conform to international organizations’ and state-sponsored development models (e.g., Coombe and Baird, 2016; Larsen et al., 2022). The collective effort, as this dossier reveals, led to the identification of unexpected commonalities as well as new horizons for collaboration across disciplines, areas of practice, and diverse perspectives. The exchanges on heritage and decoloniality taking place across several meetings revealed a common aspiration to unpack heritage politics through their multiple historical, juridical, emotional, and spatial dimensions. Colonial heritage matters are not merely historical events and material remains of the past that can simply be acknowledged or rejected. Rather, they emerge from the remediation of difficult pasts that radically challenge the hierarchical taxonomies and practices used to categorize people, objects, and landscapes. This discussion resonates with the call for “a rhizomatic cosmopolitics” (Papailias and Gupta, 2021, 964) to the extent that it aspires to disclose opportunities for more equitable worldings through anthropological knowledge. Specifically, a core focus gradually emerged in the quest to navigate and overcome the legacies of privilege, raciality, and inequality in both material and relational senses. A number of shared questions guided the conversation: How do we systematically move beyond the grammars, languages, and immediate symbolic acts of defiance, popular mobilization, and protest? How, and under which conditions, can the goals of decolonization be achieved within and through heritage? Do profound ontological and epistemic barriers prevent emancipatory grassroots heritage politics to work in practice? What is, indeed, needed for heritage to become a practical tool for disenfranchised people to “embody history,” as theorized by Fanon (1963, 40), and to channel “an uncoercive rearrangement of desires,” as Spivak (2004, 526) advocated? We propose three interrelated lines of interrogation for this collection of essays (Figure 2). The first line of exploration concerns the divergent ways in which decoloniality has emerged or been mobilized in different national and regional contexts. The second line of investigation concerns the concrete manifestations and consequences of addressing decoloniality in contemporary heritage practice. The third line of inquiry explores the practical implications, lessons, and opportunities for transformative and collaborative actions. We will return and expand on these three key points after briefly introducing the individual contributions in the next section. The resulting papers of our exchanges raise multiple questions, practices, and tactics at the intersection of discursive and material approaches to look at the links and frictions between heritage and decoloniality from a variety of settings and perspectives. The first set of papers explores the collaborative encounters enabled through heritage and the practical consequences of dealing with decoloniality in the field. Leïla Baracchini and Julien Monney draw attention to the “aesthetic persuasion” that limits institutional and grassroots movements to decolonize heritage in Guadeloupe. They suggest that the creative act of juxtaposition and mixing heterogeneous times and materials nonetheless matters to intertwine past and present, tangible and intangible elements into spaces and poetics of reflection, reparation, and resignification of difficult inheritances. Similar insights are provided by Roberta Burchardt in her evocative and intimate piece unraveling the performative legacies of a Luso-Brazilian house through material connections and sensorial attachments. Revealing a site of enduring colonial privilege, she offers a pathway to “relearn to love from those who can see trees as monuments to past civilizations.” Writing on behalf of the Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Collective of Catamarca's High Valleys (CIIVAC), Alejandra Korstanje unveils the potential of incorporating slow methodologies and community collaborations into archaeology to produce better practice and situated knowledge on heritage, identity, and territory claims of peasant and Indigenous communities in Northwest Argentina. Through shared decision-making and effective communicative strategies, she pinpoints the establishment of trusting relationships enabling scholars and local communities “walking together” in mutually sustainable initiatives. Blurring distinctions and hierarchies of expertise discloses connections between heritage and other fundamental rights, such as education or health, within the common ground of “thinking-feeling” and taking care of the land. The interactions of heritage, rights, and disenfranchised communities are further considered by several authors from a more discursive and equally critical point of view. Lucas Lixinski reflects on the uneasy relationships between heritage, the law, and racial capitalism in the case of the constitutional recognition of quilombolas, Afro-descendant communities in Brazil. He argues that the authorizing register of legal discourse is by and large unable to live up to the aspirations of heritage as a decolonial tool. Nonetheless, it can still be somewhat promising strategically for historically oppressed groups. Bryony Onciul focuses on the potential of heritage to support Indigenous rights and responsibilities in Canada, arguing that heritage needs to decolonize and broaden its conception to enable meaningful, action-based connections between past, present, and future that further anticolonial efforts. What decoloniality may imply in non-Western settler contexts was another subject of considerable discussion. Florence Graezer Bideau and Pascale Bugnon focus on the dynamics of official heritage management in China, offering a different perspective from which to reflect on international practices and taken-for-granted assumptions of decolonial work. They highlight the process of “social engineering” in which heritage policies are enmeshed with hierarchies and racialized narratives in a nation-building project and explore the significance of decolonial practice. The contribution is relevant here to underline how the tropes of decoloniality must be seen in the context of hierarchies of values and hegemonic heritage practices that reinforce rather than challenge logics of discrimination. This concern is echoed in the conversational piece by Hasini Haputhanthri, Gill Juleff, and Sanathanan Thamotharampillai as the authors hinge upon their experiences in conducting archaeological and museum research and artistic engagements in Sri Lanka during and after the civil war. They foreground the difficulties of working/reworking concepts and practices within an enduring colonial system of knowledge that allocates space for minorities without challenging meaning and authority but preventing the “recoding” of heritage as a means to resistance and social justice. Finally, the collection is complemented by three interviews with people involved in the practice of the decoloniality and heritage nexus. The current director of the Museum of Ethnography of Geneva (MEG), Carine Ayélé Durand, points to the changing role of ethnographic museums and anthropology at large in favoring the move toward decoloniality through the resignification of collections and meaningful public engagement. The Haudenosaunee Confederacy's delegate, Brennen Ferguson, provides an important testimony of a process leading to the restitution of sacred items from this museum, highlighting the importance of “respectful and good-faith” collaboration to determine the future of museum objects collected from Indigenous territories. ICCROM's director general, Webber Ndoro, focuses on the colonial nature of heritage discourse and practice in Africa, underlining persistent global asymmetries and the importance of anthropology in bringing other voices to the table. As these cases show, competing issues in accessing and creating knowledge (who has the right to speak about heritage) and what is done with expert knowledge (whose expertise counts) are symptomatic of entrenched and enduring power relations. Altogether, the contributions demonstrate how the long-term effects of colonial experiences and heritage-making practices are intricately entangled with modernist imaginaries, community lifeworlds, and nation-state building. Through the focus on the heritage and decoloniality nexus, the participants in this forum interrogate different genealogies and persistent expressions of heritage in the naturalization of ethnic and racial hierarchies of knowledge, power, and being. Unraveling the entangled structures of control, resources, and embodied attachments with deep roots in (and sometimes preceding) the foundations of nation-states is a complex and even doomed task if the structural violence of their modern classifications and temporalities remains unchallenged (Pels, 2022; Trouillot, 2002). To unpack such layers of structural violence, efforts to excavate the similarities, confluences, divergences, and cross-fertilizations of different postcolonial contexts and scales remain as relevant as ever. How to make sense of the “variations on the theme of destruction and creolization,” as Trouillot (2002, 233) put it, through which the “savage slot” allocated to cultural and ethnic minorities in official heritage policies and institutions can be acknowledged, challenged, and prompted to deploy its transformative potential? Diversity in trajectories, we insist, should not be a deterrent for comparison but a catalyst to expand perspectives on a concrete political issue (Stengers, 2011). Building on the long-standing scholarly debates on postcolonial practices, discourses, and modes of being, we argue that a focus on decoloniality—as the complementary side of modernity/coloniality (Mignolo and Escobar, 2013; Mignolo and Walsh, 2018)—enables us to interweave a diversity of historical and regional contexts, with their colonial ambiguities and specific power structures and dynamics, while maintaining a sensitivity to the nuances and creativity derived from contextual and performative heritage engagements. It is important to revisit the inextricable political, economic, and cultural links between modernity and colonialism, which continue to reenact and reproduce power asymmetries, epistemic injustices, and ontological discrimination. This suggests that for the decoloniality and heritage nexus to overcome narrow geographical and historical scopes, it must acknowledge that the “colonial matrix of power … has to be central to any discussion of contemporary global inequalities and the historical basis of their emergence” (Bhambra, 2014, 119). Within these ecologies of discussions and reflexivity, we pose the questions: How can decolonization in the heritage field become more than a metaphorical gesture (Tuck and Yang, 2012, 1)? How do we move beyond narrow disciplinary historiographies, quick fixes, and therapeutic tools to build care, reciprocity, and tolerance in a hostile world undermining such aspirations in practice? At stake are distinct temporalities, spatial manifestations, and highly diverse implications for heritage practice. In grappling with decoloniality as a common yet heterogeneous perspective, we bring attention to subaltern histories, material and discursive narratives, and political aesthetics to identify and further interrogate the recurrent “colonial toxicities” (Stoler, 2018, 543) underpinning contemporary heritage discourses and practices (Shepherd, 2018). There are clear risks with grand narratives that reduce all (post)colonial subjectivities and experiences to similar challenges and expressions (Fowles, 2016; Rivera Cusicanqui, 2014). Addressing such divergences and granular differences is critical to redefining the conditions necessary for more equitable future heritage trajectories. Ranging from the politics of curating colonial legacies in museum exhibitions to everyday practices of taking care of nested sacred landscapes, what is striking is the uneven capacity to undo legacies of privilege, let alone to influence the wider public sphere in which they are located. Decolonial heritage practices are confronted with the risk of expertise provoking further displacement, not least by expanding the toolkit of new methodologies and conceptual frameworks to deepen collaboration and co-creation of knowledge (Boast, 2011; Rizvi, 2020). Actual practice is too often hindered by notions that essentialize knowledge “types” that need to be “bridged,” rather than recognizing the shifting “knowledge spaces” (Turnbull, 1997, 553), unequal relations, and perspectives involved in collaboration (Green, 2015; Springgay and Truman, 2018; Watson and Huntington, 2008, 275). How “seriously” counter-hegemonic subaltern knowledge, practice, and ontologies are taken—the old issue that Spivak (1988) notoriously framed as the question “Can the subaltern speak?”—at the end of the day often depends on the timelines, hierarchies, and budgets of “heritage as usual.” Faced with such realities, is decolonizing (through) heritage then even possible? Is this then a matter of conciliatory rhetoric “domesticat[ing] decolonization” (Tuck and Yang, 2012, 3), depoliticizing and ultimately pacifying the unsettling potential of critical perspectives on heritage and rights? Disruption is needed to challenge depoliticization, bureaucratic obstacles, and the essentialization of cultural diversity by creating space for alternative affective practices, ontologies, and politics of heritage. It is crucial to question a purely prescriptive ethos and approaches that seek conciliation through common heritage management and one-size-fits-all solutions. Dissonant and contradictory encounters with heritage objects and sites can be the source of renewed critical thinking and political action. The wealth of experience of people deeply involved in contested territories over decades showcased in this section highlights the seemingly incommensurable challenges posed by the dual nature of heritage as tangible “things” as much as intangible “process,” revealing networks of attachments (to objects, places, memories, people, other species, and beings) that create unique configurations and trajectories. In our own engagements with Indigenous peoples, descendant communities and minorities (Larsen, 2015, 2018, 2022; Lazzari, 2008, 2011; Lazzari and Korstanje, 2013; Orlandi, 2022), we have witnessed how the tropes of heritage rights and conservation have been repurposed and reshaped to curate pasts that matter for imagined futures. The bricolage of distinct place-based fluid dynamics with often long-established anticolonial taxonomies emerges as pathways toward “re-existing” and “de-linking” from Western/metropolitan aesthetics and modes of classification (Mignolo and Walsh, 2018, 7). Decoloniality, in this sense, also intersects with non-anthropocentric understandings of heritage, the humanities, and social sciences (e.g., Harrison and Sterling, 2020), insofar as we need to challenge the modernist assumption relegating the nonhuman to being rounded up, shackled, classified, and packaged for consumption (as commodities, as knowledge, as data). Moving against this, Mignolo and Walsh (2018, 1) argued for “vincularidad … the awareness of the integral relation and interdependence amongst all living organisms (in which humans are only a part) with territory or land and the A and is and of the heritage and decoloniality nexus as it provides on and to and care an that of the other is the of the 2015, not need to exchanges a for in the space encounters with heritage are et al., 2018). and are and pathways to move from old and their and interactions and with heritage multiple about hierarchies of past, present, and future of and heritage across these diverse and is as a colonial it must be that can be potential for communities of and resistance from the in spaces and the act of It is with these in that we on decoloniality as a or work in to highlight that it is not a to be in but an interrogation that remains relevant to even the and frameworks and across multiple practices a process may be considered a for the colonial logics and legacies continue to be under new What we do with it, and how we in the a Through the “heritage matrix of lines are between that which is and and that which is the of attention and people, materials, places, and in of and heritage and the of of and of enduring a matrix its from the of individual and collective and to a of and changing relations, while the embodied experience of often across such what can be put into The question behalf are we remains as and postcolonial heritage in our first a point that is further by the field of cultural This question a new as we to ways to with the wider and heritage in a and all the contributions in the section on heritage and decoloniality on the to what and decolonization may in contexts and how these may make sense in practice and in different and 2012, 7). The collection of papers and interviews that this dossier that not all to the persistent and hierarchies that have the world we Rather, it a call to reinforce both academic and institutional spaces for decoloniality as a field of practice for critical inquiry and new ways of
  • The heritage entanglement of Tiwanaku (Bolivia): An approach from archaeological ethnography
    Orlandi, Francesco
    Confluenze, 2023
    El artículo propone una historia de la patrimonialización del sitio arqueológico de Tiwanaku desde una perspectiva de larga duración y centrada en la relacionalidad activada por las ruinas. Lo que emerge es una tensión constante entre discursos oficiales y sociabilidad indígena desde los tiempos coloniales, pasando por la afirmación del estado nacional moderno, hasta el avance del neoliberalismo multicultural. El análisis informa sobre dinámicas de poder que caracterizan al estado plurinacional desde una lectura cosmopolítica de las relaciones patrimoniales.
  • Indigenous Heritage and Ontological Conflicts in the Southcentral Andes
    Francesco Orlandi
    Future Anterior, 2022
    Taking inspiration from the epistemological potential of the Aymara concept of taypi this contribution aims to show the persistence of Indigenous peoples' self-determination and community governance in contemporary heritage politics. A multisited archaeological ethnography across Tiwanaku (Bolivia) and the Calchaquí valleys (Tucumán, Argentina) brings to light the long memories of anti-colonial resistance in the southcentral Andes and visualizes heritage-making practices in their ecological dimension, bridging multiple temporalities and territorial relatedness. The resulting picture figures a deep-seated tension between regulatory policies that adjust indigenous heritage to universal classifications and values embedded in the modern nation-state imaginaries, and emancipatory politics in which heritage claims are entangled with the social reproduction of community life and with the reparation of historical injustices. This twofold political dimension materializes in the legal artefact of the free, prior, informed consultation (FPIC), whose long memory of ambiguity is traced down to the early day of colonization. The article argues that consent-seeking mechanisms create an intermediate space where universal and place-based worldmaking designs converge. Locating these grey areas in time and space is crucial for addressing intercultural histories and future-oriented practices of heritage rights.
  • The long memory of patrimonialization: an archaeological ethnography of the cosmopolitical disagreements around the Sacred City of Quilmes (Argentina)
    Francesco Orlandi
    Arqueologia, 2022
    En este artículo combino las posturas críticas de la etnografía arqueológica y las aberturas epistémicas propiciadas por recientes desarrollos en tema de ontología política para investigar en los pliegues de las múltiples temporalidades de la patrimonialización del sitio arqueológico de Quilmes y de su resignificación como Ciudad Sagrada; un proceso que coincide con la consolidación del consenso sobre la interpretación multicultural y etnodesarrollista del derecho al patrimonio indígena a nivel nacional e internacional durante los últimos veinte años. Este enfoque analítico busca recomponer los procesos de resistencia y lucha política anticolonial del pueblo Diaguita en los valles Calchaquíes del noroeste argentino, a través de tres recortes temporales que permiten entrelazar el pasado-presente de la Ciudad Sagrada con la libre determinación y el devenir histórico de la Comunidad India Quilmes. En esta zona de fricción, material y no-discursiva, se sitúa lo que identifico como sistema patrimonios/derechos: un prisma que permite desempacar las contradicciones y los límites del multiculturalismo neoliberal y arrojar luz sobre las cosmopolíticas que agitan la infraestructura del consenso, visibilizando los desacuerdos sobre qué es patrimonio y quiénes tienen el derecho y la responsabilidad de cuidarlo para las generaciones futuras.

RECENT SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • Heritage cosmopolitics and the contemporary past of the southcentral Andes
    F Orlandi
    Archaeologies of Contemporary and Political Global Settings: Approaches to … , 2026
    2026
  • Fence and friction at Tiwanaku (Bolivia): An archaeological ethnography of heritage, indigeneity and rights
    F Orlandi
    History and Anthropology 36 (4), 681-701 , 2025
    2025
  • Indigenous rights and heritage between archaeological ethnography, contemporary past and cosmopolitics
    F Orlandi
    International Conference “Decolonising Cultural Heritage”–Università per … , 2025
    2025
  • Archaeological Ethnography of Indigenous Heritage Rights: Emergent Realities around the Petroglyph of the ‘Chiqui’in Amaicha del Valle (NW Argentina)
    F Orlandi
    Archaeologies 21 (1), 125-151 , 2025
    2025
  • Introduction-The heritage and decoloniality nexus: Global exchanges and unresolved questions in sedimented landscapes of injustice
    M Lazzari, PB Larsen, F Orlandi
    University of Exeter , 2024
    2024
    Citations: 6
  • El enredo patrimonial de Tiwanaku (Bolivia): una aproximación desde la etnografía arqueológica
    F Orlandi
    Confluenze: Rivista di Studi Iberoamericani 15 (2), 545-568 , 2023
    2023
    Citations: 3
  • La memoria larga de la patrimonialización: una etnografía arqueológica de los desacuerdos cosmopolíticos en torno a la Ciudad Sagrada de Quilmes (Argentina)
    F Orlandi
    University of Exeter , 2022
    2022
    Citations: 7
  • Heritage Cosmopolitics: Archaeology, Indigeneity and Rights in Bolivia and Argentina
    F Orlandi
    University of Exeter , 2022
    2022
    Citations: 2
  • Indigenous heritage and ontological conflicts in the southcentral Andes
    F Orlandi
    Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation History, Theory, and … , 2022
    2022
    Citations: 4
  • Patrimonio, territorio y gobernanza indígena: la inscripción del petroglifo de El Chiqui como patrimonio comunitario
    F Orlandi
    Comunidad Indígena Amaicha del Valle: Gobernanza territorial y prácticas del … , 2021
    2021
  • Patrimonio cultural como derecho humano: la aportación de las historias y reivindicaciones indígenas al debate transnacional
    F Orlandi
    Los pueblos indígenas de América Latina: actas del II CIPIAL, 2107-2127 , 2018
    2018
    Citations: 2
  • El derecho humano al patrimonio cultural: desarrollos recientes, crisis, y perspectivas decoloniales
    F Orlandi
    Charla Magistral en el 1er Congreso Internacional Conservación del … , 2018
    2018
    Citations: 3
  • Uncovering convivencia from the dark depth of modernity: toward intercultural rights to heritage.
    F Orlandi
    European Association of Archaeologists Meeting , 2016
    2016
  • I vestiti nuovi dell'imperatore nel Giardino dell'Eden e altre pericolose assurdità. Perché Napoleon Chagnon non può dimostrare niente?(Traduzione di Francesco Orlandi)
    F Orlandi
    ANUAC 2 (2), 162-179 , 2013
    2013
    Citations: 1
  • La Grotta Campana dOro di Poggiardo (Lecce)
    G Aprile, F Orlandi
    Atti della XLIII Riunione scientifica: LEtà del rame in Italia: dedicata a … , 2011
    2011
    Citations: 4

MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • La memoria larga de la patrimonialización: una etnografía arqueológica de los desacuerdos cosmopolíticos en torno a la Ciudad Sagrada de Quilmes (Argentina)
    F Orlandi
    University of Exeter , 2022
    2022
    Citations: 7
  • Introduction-The heritage and decoloniality nexus: Global exchanges and unresolved questions in sedimented landscapes of injustice
    M Lazzari, PB Larsen, F Orlandi
    University of Exeter , 2024
    2024
    Citations: 6
  • Indigenous heritage and ontological conflicts in the southcentral Andes
    F Orlandi
    Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation History, Theory, and … , 2022
    2022
    Citations: 4
  • La Grotta Campana dOro di Poggiardo (Lecce)
    G Aprile, F Orlandi
    Atti della XLIII Riunione scientifica: LEtà del rame in Italia: dedicata a … , 2011
    2011
    Citations: 4
  • El enredo patrimonial de Tiwanaku (Bolivia): una aproximación desde la etnografía arqueológica
    F Orlandi
    Confluenze: Rivista di Studi Iberoamericani 15 (2), 545-568 , 2023
    2023
    Citations: 3
  • El derecho humano al patrimonio cultural: desarrollos recientes, crisis, y perspectivas decoloniales
    F Orlandi
    Charla Magistral en el 1er Congreso Internacional Conservación del … , 2018
    2018
    Citations: 3
  • Heritage Cosmopolitics: Archaeology, Indigeneity and Rights in Bolivia and Argentina
    F Orlandi
    University of Exeter , 2022
    2022
    Citations: 2
  • Patrimonio cultural como derecho humano: la aportación de las historias y reivindicaciones indígenas al debate transnacional
    F Orlandi
    Los pueblos indígenas de América Latina: actas del II CIPIAL, 2107-2127 , 2018
    2018
    Citations: 2
  • I vestiti nuovi dell'imperatore nel Giardino dell'Eden e altre pericolose assurdità. Perché Napoleon Chagnon non può dimostrare niente?(Traduzione di Francesco Orlandi)
    F Orlandi
    ANUAC 2 (2), 162-179 , 2013
    2013
    Citations: 1
  • Heritage cosmopolitics and the contemporary past of the southcentral Andes
    F Orlandi
    Archaeologies of Contemporary and Political Global Settings: Approaches to … , 2026
    2026
  • Fence and friction at Tiwanaku (Bolivia): An archaeological ethnography of heritage, indigeneity and rights
    F Orlandi
    History and Anthropology 36 (4), 681-701 , 2025
    2025
  • Indigenous rights and heritage between archaeological ethnography, contemporary past and cosmopolitics
    F Orlandi
    International Conference “Decolonising Cultural Heritage”–Università per … , 2025
    2025
  • Archaeological Ethnography of Indigenous Heritage Rights: Emergent Realities around the Petroglyph of the ‘Chiqui’in Amaicha del Valle (NW Argentina)
    F Orlandi
    Archaeologies 21 (1), 125-151 , 2025
    2025
  • Patrimonio, territorio y gobernanza indígena: la inscripción del petroglifo de El Chiqui como patrimonio comunitario
    F Orlandi
    Comunidad Indígena Amaicha del Valle: Gobernanza territorial y prácticas del … , 2021
    2021
  • Uncovering convivencia from the dark depth of modernity: toward intercultural rights to heritage.
    F Orlandi
    European Association of Archaeologists Meeting , 2016
    2016