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Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley
Emeritus Professor

Ian Lilley

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53236

Overview

Background

Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley FSA FAHA (BA Hons, MA Qld, PhD ANU) is an internationally-renowned discipline leader whose interests focus on archaeology and heritage across Australasia, the Indo-Pacific and globally.

Ian is an archaeologist and heritage practitioner in the UQ School of Social Science, to where he moved in retirement in 2019 after 25 years leading the academic program in UQ's Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit (ATSIS). From 2015, he was also the invited inaugural Willem Willems Chair for Contemporary Issues in Archaeological Heritage Management at Leiden University in the Netherlands, from which he retired at the end of 2022. Leiden is continental Europe's leading university in archaeology and among the global Top 10 in the discipline. Ian remains an Advisor to the Centre for Global Heritage and Development (Leiden University, Delft University of Technology and Erasmus University Rotterdam), based in Leiden's Faculty of Archaeology. In Australia, he is an Honorary Professor at the University of Southern Queensland, where he provides strategic advice to help build research capacity in the Centre for Heritage and Culture within the Institute for Resilient Regions.

Ian's pioneering Honours and Masters research examined the precolonial archaeology of Southeast Queensland. Following ground-breaking work in Papua New Guinea with the Australian Museum, Ian then did his PhD on ancient maritime trading systems which linked the New Guinea mainland and nearby Bismarck Archipelago. During his PhD, he took time out to lead a team in PNG's Duke of York Islands as a part of the international ANU-National Geographic Lapita Homeland Project. He then built on his PhD with a UQ Postdoctoral Fellowship, for which he independently won National Geographic funding to return to PNG. He has since undertaken archaeological and cultural heritage research, consultancies and advisory missions throughout Australia, in Asia and the Pacific Islands and in North and South America. Ian's current heritage research focuses on global issues regarding World Heritage, particularly in relation to Indigenous people and other traditional/ descendent communities. He is also an accredited Subject Matter Expert with the US Defense POW-MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA). In this capacity, he provides strategic advice to the US Defense Department regarding the recovery of missing US service members from WWII to the present and oversees field missions to locate missing personnel. In that broad connection, he has recently completed a project with Dutch partners including the Netherlands Ministry of Defence and funded by the Netherlands Embassy, concerning the WWII headquarters of the Netherlands East Indies government in exile, which were located at Wacol just outside Brisbane. Ian has also supervised over 20 PhD and MPhil research projects to completion in many different schools across UQ as well as others at Leiden.

Ian is a Fellow and past International Secretary and Vice President of the Australian Academy of Humanities, a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London and a member of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, a Federal statutory body. At UQ, Ian is a Senior Research Associate in the Centre for Policy Futures in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and an emeritus member of the UQ Centre for Marine Science. Externally, Ian is a member of Australia ICOMOS, an ICOMOS World Heritage Assessor and past Secretary-General of the ICOMOS International Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management (ICAHM). In these connections, he sits on the Conservation Advisory Committee for the Port Arthur World Heritage site complex and previously sat on the Scientific Advisory Committee for the Willandra Lakes World Heritage region. In addition, he is a member of the IUCN World Commission on Protected Areas and the IUCN Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy. In these capacities, he undertakes IUCN assessments of World Heritage cultural landscapes. He was also a member of the Advisory Group for a major IUCN-coordinated multi-agency project to reshape the assessment of protected area management effectiveness to include cultural as well as natural factors. ICOMOS and IUCN are the statutory independent Advisory Bodies to UNESCO on cultural and natural heritage respectively, and Ian is one of the few people globally who is a member of both world bodies. He is also immediate past Secretary-General of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association, the region's peak professional archaeological body, past Chair of the International Government Affairs Committee of the Society for American Archaeology, the world's largest professional archaeological body, and served three consecutive terms as President of the Australian Archaeological Association. Ian's other professional interests are archaeology and social identity, archaeological ethics, and the role of archaeology and archaeological heritage in contemporary society.

Availability

Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Archaeology, The University of Queensland
  • Masters (Research) of Archaeology, The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy of Archaeology, Australian National University

Research impacts

Ian's professional mission has been to spearhead a worldwide paradigm shift that integrates local community perspectives with science and ethics in the study and protection of humanity's cultural and natural heritage. He pursues this goal in Australia and globally through his strong engagement with government and industry as well as his scholarly research. All of Ian's work aims to inject community concerns and approaches into the centre of professional agendas at all levels, from the UN down and from the local grassroots up. The objective is to promote fundamental structural change to the benefit of local communities, archaeologists and heritage practitioners across Australia and around the world. This work has seen Ian publish widely on such matters as well as play central roles in efforts to strengthen cooperation and coordination between ICOMOS and IUCN, the two independent statutory Advisory Bodies to the UNESCO World Heritage Centre. On the strength of this work, Ian has been invited to take up numerous international advisory positions, including a strategic advisory role with the Pentagon concerning the overall approach of the US Defense POW-MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) to its global mission. Most recently, Ian has begun working with the Antiquities Coalition in Washington DC (https://theantiquitiescoalition.org/) to combat the illicit global trade in antiquities, developing a policy brief to help strengthen the emerging interest of the G20 in such matters (e.g. https://en.unesco.org/news/g20-agrees-first-declaration-culture).

Works

Search Professor Ian Lilley’s works on UQ eSpace

178 works between 1978 and 2024

1 - 20 of 178 works

2024

Book Chapter

Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging

Versluys, Miguel John and Lilley, Ian (2024). Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging. Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging: archaeological and anthropological perspectives. (pp. 3-14) edited by Lennart Wouter Kruijer, Miguel John Versluys and Ian Lilley. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis. doi: 10.4324/9781003348740-2

Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging

2024

Book

Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging: archaeological and anthropological perspectives

Lennart Wouter Kruijer, Miguel John Versluys and Ian Lilley eds. (2024). Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging: archaeological and anthropological perspectives. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis. doi: 10.4324/9781003348740

Rooted cosmopolitanism, heritage and the question of belonging: archaeological and anthropological perspectives

2023

Journal Article

The importance of nutrition-sensitive fisheries management: Women's dietary diversity in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands

Rabbitt, Sheridan, Lilley, Ian, Albert, Simon, Albert, Joelle and Tibbetts, Ian (2023). The importance of nutrition-sensitive fisheries management: Women's dietary diversity in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands. Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development, 13 (1), 1-17. doi: 10.5304/jafscd.2023.131.004

The importance of nutrition-sensitive fisheries management: Women's dietary diversity in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands

2023

Book Chapter

Archaeology, Heritage, and the Heritage of Archaeology

Lilley, Ian (2023). Archaeology, Heritage, and the Heritage of Archaeology. Sentient Archaeologies. (pp. 191-198) Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxbow Books. doi: 10.2307/jj.2373316.28

Archaeology, Heritage, and the Heritage of Archaeology

2022

Journal Article

Indigenous Archaeology in the Philippines: Decolonizing Ifugao History

Lilley, Ian (2022). Indigenous Archaeology in the Philippines: Decolonizing Ifugao History. American Antiquity, 88 (2), 274-275. doi: 10.1017/aaq.2022.99

Indigenous Archaeology in the Philippines: Decolonizing Ifugao History

2022

Journal Article

Testing a model to assess women’s inclusion and participation in community-based resource management in Solomon Islands

Rabbitt, Sheridan, Tibbetts, Ian R., Albert, Simon and Lilley, Ian (2022). Testing a model to assess women’s inclusion and participation in community-based resource management in Solomon Islands. Maritime Studies, 21 (4), 1-19. doi: 10.1007/s40152-022-00282-1

Testing a model to assess women’s inclusion and participation in community-based resource management in Solomon Islands

2022

Journal Article

Review of Latte in the Marianas: By the community for the community : edited by Kelly G. Marsh (Taitano) and Jolie Liston, Guam, The Latte in the Marianas: Art, Icon, and Archaeology Project, 2021, 130pp., $65.00 USD (hardback), ISBN 978-0-578-52109-1

Lilley, Ian (2022). Review of Latte in the Marianas: By the community for the community : edited by Kelly G. Marsh (Taitano) and Jolie Liston, Guam, The Latte in the Marianas: Art, Icon, and Archaeology Project, 2021, 130pp., $65.00 USD (hardback), ISBN 978-0-578-52109-1. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 28 (7), 886-888. doi: 10.1080/13527258.2022.2086603

Review of Latte in the Marianas: By the community for the community : edited by Kelly G. Marsh (Taitano) and Jolie Liston, Guam, The Latte in the Marianas: Art, Icon, and Archaeology Project, 2021, 130pp., $65.00 USD (hardback), ISBN 978-0-578-52109-1

2020

Book Chapter

Integrating science and local knowledge to strengthen biosphere reserve management

Hockings, Marc, Lilley, Ian, Matar, Diane A., Dudley, Nigel and Markham, Robert (2020). Integrating science and local knowledge to strengthen biosphere reserve management. UNESCO Biosphere Reserves: supporting biocultural diversity, sustainability and society. (pp. 241-253) edited by Maureen G. Reed and Martin F. Price. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780429428746-19

Integrating science and local knowledge to strengthen biosphere reserve management

2019

Journal Article

What's the catch in who fishes? Fisherwomen's contributions to fisheries an food security in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands

Rabbitt, Sheridan, Lilley, Ian, Albert, Simon and Tibbetts, Ian R. (2019). What's the catch in who fishes? Fisherwomen's contributions to fisheries an food security in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands. Marine Policy, 108 103667, 1-7. doi: 10.1016/j.marpol.2019.103667

What's the catch in who fishes? Fisherwomen's contributions to fisheries an food security in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands

2019

Journal Article

Fishing for cash – village attitudes towards fish exports in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands

Rabbitt, Sheridan, Lilley, Ian, Albert, Simon and Tibbetts, Ian R. (2019). Fishing for cash – village attitudes towards fish exports in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands. Women in Fisheries Information Bulletin, 30-33.

Fishing for cash – village attitudes towards fish exports in Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands

2019

Book Chapter

Lapita: the Australian connection

Lilley, Ian (2019). Lapita: the Australian connection. Debating Lapita: Distribution, Chronology, Society and Subsistence. (pp. 105-114) edited by Stuart Bedford and Matthew Spriggs. Canberra, ACT Australia: ANU Press. doi: 10.22459/TA52.2019.05

Lapita: the Australian connection

2018

Journal Article

Who benefits? World Heritage and indigenous people

Pocock, Celmara and Lilley, Ian (2018). Who benefits? World Heritage and indigenous people. Heritage and Society, 10 (2), 171-190. doi: 10.1080/2159032X.2018.1503836

Who benefits? World Heritage and indigenous people

2018

Book Chapter

The fusion of law and ethics in cultural heritage management: the 21st century confronts archaeology

Soderland, Hilary A. and Lilley, Ian A. (2018). The fusion of law and ethics in cultural heritage management: the 21st century confronts archaeology. Relevance and application of heritage in contemporary society. (pp. 160-185) edited by Pei-Lin Yu, Chen Shen and George S. Smith. New York, NY United States: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9780203702277-16

The fusion of law and ethics in cultural heritage management: the 21st century confronts archaeology

2018

Book Chapter

Subsistence middlemen traders and pre-colonial globalization in Melanesia

Lilley, Ian (2018). Subsistence middlemen traders and pre-colonial globalization in Melanesia. Globalization in prehistory: contact, exchange, and the 'People Without History'. (pp. 308-333) edited by Nicole Boivin and Michael D. Frachetti. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. doi: 10.1017/9781108573276.014

Subsistence middlemen traders and pre-colonial globalization in Melanesia

2018

Book Chapter

World heritage and human rights in Australia: from K'gari/Fraser Island to national processes

Lilley, Ian, Buckley, Kristal and Kajlich, Helena (2018). World heritage and human rights in Australia: from K'gari/Fraser Island to national processes. World Heritage and Human Rights: Lessons from the Asia-Pacific and Global Arena. (pp. 49-69) edited by Peter Bille Larsen. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis.

World heritage and human rights in Australia: from K'gari/Fraser Island to national processes

2017

Journal Article

UNESCO in Southeast Asia: world heritage sites in comparative perspective

Lilley, Ian (2017). UNESCO in Southeast Asia: world heritage sites in comparative perspective. International Journal of Cultural Property, 24 (2), 239-241. doi: 10.1017/S0940739117000066

UNESCO in Southeast Asia: world heritage sites in comparative perspective

2017

Journal Article

Indigenous archaeological heritage in Australia: definition and management of sites

Lilley, Ian (2017). Indigenous archaeological heritage in Australia: definition and management of sites. American Anthropologist, 119 (1), 131-133. doi: 10.1111/aman.12811

Indigenous archaeological heritage in Australia: definition and management of sites

2017

Journal Article

Palaeoecology: agriculture emerges from the calm

Lilley, Ian (2017). Palaeoecology: agriculture emerges from the calm. Nature Ecology and Evolution, 1 (3) 0085, 85. doi: 10.1038/s41559-017-0085

Palaeoecology: agriculture emerges from the calm

2017

Book Chapter

Melanesian maritime middlemen and pre-colonial glocalization

Lilley, Ian (2017). Melanesian maritime middlemen and pre-colonial glocalization. The Routledge handbook of archaeology and globalization. (pp. 335-353) edited by Tamar Hodos. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Taylor and Francis. doi: 10.4324/9781315449005

Melanesian maritime middlemen and pre-colonial glocalization

2017

Book Chapter

Globalization thinking in Australasia and Oceania

Lilley, Ian (2017). Globalization thinking in Australasia and Oceania. The Routledge handbook of archaeology and globalization. (pp. 279-282) edited by Tamar Hodos. Abingdon, Oxon, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781315449005

Globalization thinking in Australasia and Oceania

Funding

Past funding

  • 2020 - 2022
    Camp Columbia revealed: celebrating and preserving the Dutch WWII headquarters in Brisbane, Australia
    Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
    Open grant
  • 2019
    Zooming In, Zooming Out: High-Definition Multi-Scalar Technologies in Archaeology, Cultural Heritage and Environment
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2016
    Operationalising research collections in archaeological science and museum studies
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    What could World Heritage listing deliver for Indigenous people? The Australian experience in global context.
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2012
    A social science e-research hub for data management, analysis and dissemination in material and visual culture
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2011
    New directions and capacity building in archaeological and palaeoenvironmental research
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    Exploring Problem-Based Learning Pedagogy as Transformative Education in Indigenous Australian Studies
    ALTC Priority Projects
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2010
    Facilitating and Supporting Indigenous Students in the Transition from Undergraduate to postgraduate Study
    UQ DEEWR Higher Education Equity Support Program Grants
    Open grant
  • 2008
    Creating new research opportunities in archaeological & anthropological science
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2007 - 2009
    Loyalty Islands Archaeological Project: Phase I (Tiga Island)
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2010
    Isolation, Insularity and Change in Island Populations - an Interdisciplinary Study of Aboriginal Cultural Patterns in the Gulf of Carpentaria
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2004 - 2005
    French-Australian archaeological survey in the Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia (Joint ASA/French Embassy project)
    Ambassade de France en Australie
    Open grant
  • 2003 - 2004
    Archaeological Heritage In Eastern Torres Strait
    University of Queensland Research Development Grants Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2001 - 2002
    Cania gorge regional archaeological project (Stage 1)
    Australian Institute Aboriginal/Torres Str Isl Std
    Open grant
  • 2000
    Geoarchaeological and palaeoenvironmental investigation of Aboriginal cultural landscapes on the south Curtis Coast, central Queensland
    ARC Australian Research Council (Small grants)
    Open grant
  • 2000 - 2002
    The Gooreng Gooreng archaeology project
    ARC Australian Research Council (Large grants)
    Open grant
  • 1999
    Stone axes and ethnicity in Gooreng Gooreng country coastal Queensland : a social-scientific application of inductively-coupled plasma mass-spectrometry
    ARC Australian Research Council (Small grants)
    Open grant
  • 1996 - 1997
    Gooreng Gooreng contemporary social landscape project
    Australian Institute Aboriginal/Torres Str Isl Std
    Open grant
  • 1996
    Which road forward? An evaluation of alternative assessment strategies in improving equity of outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in the evolving context of a mass higher educat
    DEET Evaluations & Investigations Program
    Open grant
  • 1995 - 1996
    Goorang Goorang Cultural Heritage Project
    Australian Institute Aboriginal/Torres Str Isl Std
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Supervision history

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley directly for media enquiries about:

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies
  • Aboriginal history
  • Ancient/prehistoric migration and trade
  • Anthropology - Australian
  • Anthropology - Indo-Pacific
  • Archaeology
  • Archaeology and modern society
  • Australian anthropology
  • Australian archaeology
  • Australian history
  • heritage
  • Indo-Pacific anthropology
  • Indo-Pacific archaeology
  • Migration - Pacific archaeology
  • Pottery - ancient
  • Trade - archaeology of
  • world heritage

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