Skip to content

The Top Ten Alliance Blog Posts of 2024

Category: Alliance Blog
A grid of photos representing the top ten posts

The museum field has emphasized ethics and standards for at least a century—in fact, the need to solidify them was one of the primary reasons for the founding of AAM in 1906. And yet, it’s fair to say we live in a time of heightened focus on these areas. In recent years, many museum people have begun to assert that the standards we’ve long upheld—such as the Native American Graves and Repatriation Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, or the Equal Employment Opportunity Act—should represent the ground floor of ethical or values-based practices, not the ceiling. Across the field, our colleagues are asking themselves how they can go beyond legal minimums of compliance and create structures, practices, and experiences that are truly inclusive, reparative, and even transformative.

The most-read posts on the AAM website this year reflect this focus. Whether discussing innovative approaches to descendant community relationships, accessible exhibition experiences, inclusive volunteer program structures, or excellent label writing, they speak to a will to break from the ways we’ve “always done things” and forge more sincere, committed institutions. Without further ado, here were the ten most-read posts across our digital platforms.

1. A Growing Backlash to DEI

By Elizabeth Merritt

The front facade of the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington DC

As diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives have accelerated in American institutions, a small group of activists has mounted a backlash movement arguing they discriminate against majority groups, yielding significant legal victories. This post outlines how this movement has exploited minor rifts in public opinion, and how museums can navigate around these rifts while promoting progressive practices.

2. Content Warnings in Museums and Galleries: Taking a Proactive Approach

By Jackie Armstrong

A tree marked with an exclamation point and a curving road symbol

Should museums warn visitors about sensitive content in advance? It’s a matter of frequent debate among staff, according to an advocate for trauma-informed museum practices. This post explains why she believes misconceptions may be getting in the way of action, and her advice on best practices for writing your own content warnings.

3. When the Ancestors Call to You

By Isabel K. Handa & Amy V. Margaris

An antique label with the logo of Oberlin College and "Skull of Hawaiian, from Cave Burial Place. Hawaiian Ids. E.P. Church. Ac. 65" handwritten on it.

Through an unexpected set of circumstances, an Oberlin College student and professor teamed up in 2023 to return a skull from the college’s ethnographic collection to the person’s native Hawaiʻi. This post, written as a dialogue between the student and professor, outlines how the emotional repatriation experience reshaped collections protocol at the school.

4. Out of Sight: How Museums Can Harness the Blind Perspective to Enrich Visitor Experiences

By Violet Rose Arma

A pair of hands exploring a tactile model of a town

Blind people enjoy the benefits of a good museum experience as much as anyone else, but they’re often held back from them by the field’s ingrained reliance on visual information. This post explores how museums are harnessing their perspectives to make richer, more multisensory experiences for everyone.

5. Demographics of US Museum-Goers: A 2024 Annual Survey of Museum-Goers Data Story Update

By Jessica Strube

An illustration of people of diverse ages and skin tones standing in a group

What does the average museum-goer look like? The answer is changing, as new data from this year’s Annual Survey of Museum-Goers shows. This illustrated Data Story shares what the results reveal about trends in educational attainment, race and ethnicity, and age and life stage.

6. How to Transform a Volunteer Program in Six Steps

By Joseph O’Neill

A person standing by a street wearing a neon vest reading "Here to Help."

Is your volunteer program suffering from declining participation, stagnant demographics, or confusing reporting structures? If so, it may be time for a major update. This post provides a simple framework for making effective changes, based on the advice of volunteer managers who have navigated transition.

7. Consensual Curation and Our Common Future

By Tamara Serrao-Leiva

A stone sculpture resembling a human face

As the pendulum has swung on repatriation and restitution, museums have been locked into a binary between holding onto collections and letting them go. But are these really the only options? In this post, one curator shares why she believes the future lies in a middle ground of collaborative agreements, and how she’s worked to develop them with tribal and international governments in recent years.

8. Every Museum Needs a Civic Strategy. Here’s How to Find Yours.

By Sarah Jencks

An illustration of people marching with blank protest signs

If you think your museum has nothing to do with civics, you may need to expand your definition of the term. This post shares why you should consider getting into the “democracy business” by connecting the stories you tell to the issues your community cares about.

9. Striving for Excellence in Exhibition Label Writing

By John Russick and Jojo Galvan Mora

Three people posing in front of posters on display.

Despite all that’s changed in museum work over recent decades, one thing remains the same: We still rely on written labels as our primary method of communicating with visitors. How, then, can we write copy that lives up to this role, instead of being “overly long, unclear, and uninspiring”? In this post, the former organizers of AAM’s label-writing competition share what they’ve learned.

10. Rethinking the Status Quo

By Jenny Woods, Brandi Shawn-Chaparro, and Abbey Earich

A graphic of people doing an archaeological dig with the text "Rethinking the Status Quo" laid over it

Volunteer programs are facing worrying trends, with long-serving volunteers declining to return from COVID closures and few new recruits stepping up to fill their shoes. What’s behind these phenomena, and how can museums adapt? In this Museum magazine article, three seasoned volunteer managers share their strategies.

Skip over related stories to continue reading article

AAM Member-Only Content

AAM Members get exclusive access to premium digital content including:

  • Featured articles from Museum magazine
  • Access to more than 1,500 resource listings from the Resource Center
  • Tools, reports, and templates for equipping your work in museums
Log In

We're Sorry

Your current membership level does not allow you to access this content.

Upgrade Your Membership

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to Field Notes!

Packed with stories and insights for museum people, Field Notes is delivered to your inbox every Monday. Once you've completed the form below, confirm your subscription in the email sent to you.

If you are a current AAM member, please sign-up using the email address associated with your account.

Are you a museum professional?

Are you a current AAM member?

Success! Now check your email to confirm your subscription, and please add communications@aam-us.org to your safe sender list.