International Congress of Americanists


The International Congress of Americanists is an international academic conference for research in multidisciplinary studies of the Americas. Established August 25, 1875 in Nancy, France, the scholars' forum has met regularly since its inception, presently in three year increments, with the exception of during the conflict of World War II. Its meeting location alternates between Europe and the Americas. Congress members come from a variety of disciplines, including anthropology, archaeology, art, education, economy, geography, history, human rights, law, philosophy, linguistics, sociology, and urban studies.
A wide variety of subjects have been presented at the various conferences. Father Émile Petitot spoke at the 1875 Congress on the matter of the Asiatic origin of Inuit and North American Indians. Precipitated by a comment from Franz Boas, a "lively controversy" occurred at the 1902 conference in New York City over the coined word "Amerind". At the 1910 session in Mexico City, Marcos E. Becerra presented a paper on Hernán Cortés's 1524–25 expedition to Las Hibueras. The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs, a co-operative of academic anthropologist researchers and human rights activists, was first proposed at the Munich/Stuttgart conference in August 1968. The 1982 congress in Manchester included the largest conference ever convened on the Amazon basin. At the 1988 congress in Amsterdam, researchers organized a symposium agreeing to create a European network for the interchange of information about Latin America produced in Europe which was the precursor for REDIAL.
The president of the 53rd Congress was the Mexican anthropologist Elio Masferrer Kan. The event took place July 19–24, 2009, in Mexico City. The 54th Congress took place July 15–20, 2012 in Vienna, and was organized by the University of Vienna, the Austrian Latin America Institute and the Museum of Ethnology, Vienna. The 55th Congress was held in San Salvador, El Salvador, from July 12–17, 2015 with the theme "Conflict, Peace, and Construction of Identities in the Americas."

Dates and locations

1. 1875, Nancy

2. 1877, Luxembourg

3. 1879, Brussels

4. 1881, Madrid

5. 1883, Copenhagen

6. 1886, Turin

7. 1888, Berlin

8. 1890, Paris

9. 1892, Huelva

10. 1894, Stockholm

11. 1895, Mexico City

12. 1900, Paris

13. 1902, New York

14. 1904, Stuttgart

15. 1906, Quebec

16. 1908, Vienna

17. 1910, Buenos Aires ;
Mexico City

18. 1912, London

19. 1915, Washington

20. 1922, Rio de Janeiro

21. 1924, The Hague ;
Göteborg

22. 1926, Rome

23. 1928, New York

24. 1930, Hamburg

25. 1932, La Plata

26. 1935, Seville

27. 1939, Mexico City ;
Lima

28. 1947, Paris

29. 1949, New York

30. 1952, Cambridge

31. 1954, São Paulo

32. 1956, Copenhagen

33. 1958, San Jose de Costa Rica

34. 1960, Vienna

35. 1962, Mexico City

36. 1964, Madrid–Barcelona–Seville

37. 1966, Mar del Plata

38. 1968, Stuttgart–Munich

39. 1970, Lima

40. 1972, Rome–Geneve

41. 1974, Mexico City

42. 1976, Paris

43. 1979, Vancouver

44. 1982, Manchester

45. 1985, Bogota

46. 1988, Amsterdam

47. 1991, New Orleans

48. 1994, Stockholm–Göteborg

49. 1997, Quito

50. 2000, Warsaw

51. 2003, Santiago de Chile

52. 2006, Seville

53. 2009, Mexico City

54. 2012, Vienna

55. 2015, San Salvador, El Salvador

56. 2018, Salamanca

57. 2021, Foz do Iguaçu