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The Institute

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The Institute

In 1985 the American Indian Studies Research Institute (AISRI) was founded at Indiana University to serve as an interdisciplinary research center for projects focusing on the native peoples of the Americas. Photo of AISRI, 422 North Indiana Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47408AISRI was founded in part on the premise that language, culture, and history are inextricably interrelated, and that to fully understand and describe the language, culture, or history of a people, a study of one of these topics must be informed by work in the others.

The primary function of AISRI is to provide the institutional structure necessary to carry out research and educational projects, most of which are funded by outside sources including the National Science Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Current projects center around Plains Indian languages, cultures, and history, and include software development that enhances linguistic documentation, analysis, and publication, as well as innovative instructional media for teaching Native American languages. AISRI also fosters publication of research results through the journal Anthropological Linguistics and the series "Studies in the Anthropology of North American Indians," the latter published for AISRI by the University of Nebraska Press.

The American Indian Studies Research Institute is located in a two-story limestone house built at the turn of the century, situated on the northwest corner of the Bloomington campus. It stands in a quadrangle flanked by the William H. Mathers Museum of World Cultures, the Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, the Center for Research into the Anthropological Foundations of Technology, and the Folklore Institute.

© 2012, The Trustees of Indiana University