Editorial Board (enter editorial site here)
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Peter van Dommelen (p.vandommelen@archaeology.gla.ac.uk) is a lecturer in the Department of Archaeology of Glasgow University (Scotland). His research interests regard postcolonial approaches to ancient and (early) modern colonialism as well as landscape archaeology in the western Mediterranean. Between 1991 and 1999 he has co-directed the Riu Mannu regional survey project in Sardinia
Fokke Gerritsen (fa.gerritsen@let.vu.nl) is postdoctoral research fellow at the Department of Archaeology, Free University Amsterdam. His research interests include late prehistoric societies in Northwestern Europe and the Near East, landscape and settlement archaeology, and the archaeology of social identity and community. He co-directs excavations at Tell Kurdu in southeastern Turkey.
Michael Dietler (m-dietler@uchicago.edu) is associate professor in the Department of Anhropology at the University of Chicago. His research interests include colonialism and postcoloniality, material culture and consumption, and the politics of identity and social memory. He conducts archaeological research in Mediterranean France and ethnographic research in Africa and is currently co-director of the excavations at Lattes, near Montpellier, in France.
David Van Reybrouck (david.vanreybrouck@arts.kuleuven.ac.be) is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Department of History of the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium. His research focusses on the history of archaeology and on material culture studies.
Ton Derks (amj.derks@let.vu.nl) is a lecturer at the Department of Archaeology at the Free University of Amsterdam. As a Roman archaeologist his main fields of interest regard the archaeology of ritual, Latin epigraphy, and Romanization and the problem of cultural identity.
Alexander Gramsch (alexander_gramsch@yahoo.de) is currently working in an interdisciplinary project at Basel University, Switzerland (www.sozialgeschichte.unibas.ch). Here he deals with the history and epistemology of prehistoric archaeology in Switzerland. Besides his concern with the theories, politics, and histories of archaeology his research interests include the archaeology of mortuary rituals, landscape, and social relations.
Sarah Tarlow(sat12@le.ac.uk) is a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Leicester. Her teaching and research interests relate to later historical archaeology in Britain, and archaeological theory, particularly the place of emotion in archaeology, and the issues surrounding archaeological ethics. She is currently working on a book about the idea of Improvement in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries A.D.
Liv Nilson Stutz (liv.nilsson_stutz@ark.lu.se) is currently working as a researcher at the Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Lund University. She has a background in archaeology and biological anthropology and her research interests include burial practices, ritual theory and body theory. She is currently working on a research project investigating the repatriation debate from an international perspective.
Advisory Board
- Bettina Arnold (University of Wisconsin)
- John Bintliff (Univerity of Leiden)
- Richard Bradley (Univerity of Reading)
- Joanna Brück (University College Dublin)
- Margareta Díaz-Andreu (University of Durham)
- Michael Fotiadis (University of Ioannina)
- Allesandro Guidi (University of Verona)
- Michael Herzfeld (Harvard University)
- Christoph Huth (University of Regensburg)
- Matthew Johnson (University of Durham)
- Phil Kohl (Wellesley University)
- Kristian Kristiansen (University of Götenborg)
- Ian Morris (Stanford University)
- Laurent Olivier (Musée des Antiquites Nationales)
- Roberto Risch (Autonomous University of Barcelona)
- Nathan Schlanger (AREA-archives of European Archaeology)
- Nick Shepherd (University of Cape Town)
- Frans Theuws (University of Amsterdam)
- Silvia Tomaskova (University of North Carolina)
- Bruce Trigger (McGill University)
- Miguel-John Versluys (University of Leiden)
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