
Overview
Background
Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley FSA FAHA (BA Hons, MA Qld, PhD ANU) is an internationally-renowned discipline leader in archaeology and heritage across Australasia, the Asia-Pacific and globally.
Ian is based 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 during time out from his MA, 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 Australasia and the Asia-Pacific and in North and South America. Ian's current work focuses on global issues regarding World Heritage, particularly in relation to Indigenous people and other traditional/ descendent communities. He is also involved in the fight against looting and cultural trafficking, in collaboration with the Antiquities Coalition in Washington DC. In addition, Ian is an accredited Subject Matter Expert with the US Defense POW-MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA). In this capacity, he provides strategic advice to the Pentagon 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 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 and the University of Western Australia.
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 authority. 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:
- Not available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
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 to combat the illicit global trade in antiquities, developing a policy brief to help strengthen the emerging interest of the G20 in such matters (https://acthinktank.scholasticahq.com/article/126327-how-can-the-g20-best-protect-cultural-heritage-policy-recommendations-to-strengthen-commitment-in-support-of-hands-on-action).
Works
Search Professor Ian Lilley’s works on UQ eSpace
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
2016
Journal Article
Environmental reviews and case studies: cultural heritage, community engagement, and environmental impact assessment in Australia
Lilley, Ian (2016). Environmental reviews and case studies: cultural heritage, community engagement, and environmental impact assessment in Australia. Environmental Practice, 18 (3), 205-208. doi: 10.1017/S1466046616000302
2015
Journal Article
Reptile remains from Tiga (Tokanod), Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia
Daza, Juan D., Bauer, Aaron M., Sand, Christophe, Lilley, Ian, Wake, Thomas A. and Valentin, Frederique (2015). Reptile remains from Tiga (Tokanod), Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia. Pacific Science, 69 (4), 531-557. doi: 10.2984/69.4.8
2015
Journal Article
The fusion of law and ethics in cultural heritage management: the 21st century confronts archaeology
Soderland, Hilary A. and Lilley, Ian A. (2015). The fusion of law and ethics in cultural heritage management: the 21st century confronts archaeology. Journal of Field Archaeology, 40 (5), 508-522. doi: 10.1179/2042458215Y.0000000024
2015
Journal Article
The Cambridge world prehistory, vol 1, Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and the Pacific
Lilley, Ian (2015). The Cambridge world prehistory, vol 1, Africa, South and Southeast Asia, and the Pacific. Antiquity, 89 (345), 761-763. doi: 10.15184/aqy.2015.42
2015
Book Chapter
Australia and New Guinea, Archaeology of
Allen, Jim and Lilley, Ian (2015). Australia and New Guinea, Archaeology of. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences: Second Edition. (pp. 229-233) Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier . doi: 10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.13014-4
2015
Book Chapter
Earth's cultural history
Feary, Sue, Brown, Steve, Marshall, Duncan, Lilley, Ian, McKinnon, Robert, Verschuuren, Bas and Wild, Robert (2015). Earth's cultural history. Protected area governance and management. (pp. 81-116) edited by Graeme L. Worboys, Michael Lockwood, Ashish Kothari, Sue Feary and Ian Pulsford. Canberra, ACT, Australia: ANU Press.
2015
Journal Article
Transformations, transactions and technologies: New directions in Pacific heritage
Gillespie, Kirsty and Lilley, Ian (2015). Transformations, transactions and technologies: New directions in Pacific heritage. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 21 (2), 115-116. doi: 10.1080/13527258.2014.968312
2015
Book Chapter
Transnationalism and heritage development
Lafrenz Samuels, Kathryn and Lilley, Ian (2015). Transnationalism and heritage development. Global heritage: a reader. (pp. 217-239) edited by Lynn Meskell. Oxford, United Kingdom: Blackwell.
2015
Book Chapter
'This is not Australia!'
Lilley, Ian (2015). 'This is not Australia!'. Fernweh: crossing borders and connecting people in archaeological heritage management. (pp. 83-86) edited by Monique H. van den Dries, Sjoerd J. van der Linde and Amy Strecker. Leiden, The Netherlands: Sidestone Press.
2015
Journal Article
What could World Heritage deliver for Indigenous People?
Lilley, Ian (2015). What could World Heritage deliver for Indigenous People?. World Heritage Capacity-Building Newsletter (5), 16-17.
2014
Other Outputs
Translation and indigenization
Lilley, Ian A. (2014). Translation and indigenization.
2014
Book Chapter
Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association (IPPA)
Lilley, Ian (2014). Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association (IPPA). Encyclopedia of global archaeology. (pp. 3846-3847) edited by Claire Smith. New York, USA: Springer. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_1240
2014
Other Outputs
International Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management (ICAHM) (Cultural Heritage Management)
Lilley, Ian (2014). International Committee on Archaeological Heritage Management (ICAHM) (Cultural Heritage Management).
2013
Conference Publication
Beyond the Equator (Principles): a forum on community benefit sharing in relation to major land alteration projects and associated intellectual property issues in cultural heritage Held at the Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Honolulu, 5 A
Welch, John R. and Lilley, Ian A. (2013). Beyond the Equator (Principles): a forum on community benefit sharing in relation to major land alteration projects and associated intellectual property issues in cultural heritage Held at the Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Honolulu, 5 A. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. doi: 10.1017/S0940739113000258
2013
Book Chapter
Nature and culture in World Heritage management: a view from the Asia-Pacific (or, never waste a good crisis!)
Lilley, Ian (2013). Nature and culture in World Heritage management: a view from the Asia-Pacific (or, never waste a good crisis!). Transcending the Culture-Nature Divide in Cultural Heritage: Views from the Asia-Pacific Region. (pp. 13-22) edited by Sally Brockwell, Sue O’Connor and Denis Byrne. Canberra, Australia: ANU E Press.
2012
Journal Article
The shipping news
Lilley, Ian (2012). The shipping news. Australian Archaeology, 74, 24-25.
2012
Journal Article
Collaborative research in New Caledonia
Lilley, Ian , Sand, Christophe and Valentin, Frederique (2012). Collaborative research in New Caledonia. Society for American Archaeology Archaeological Bulletin.
2012
Book Chapter
Oceania, archaeological practice in
Lilley, Ian (2012). Oceania, archaeological practice in. The Oxford Companion To Archaeology. (pp. xx-xx) edited by Neil Asher Silberman. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
2012
Book Chapter
Questions in archaeology: one step forward, two steps back (or at least sideways off the track…)?
Lilley, Ian (2012). Questions in archaeology: one step forward, two steps back (or at least sideways off the track…)?. Taking stock: the humanities in Australian life since 1968. (pp. 223-229) edited by Ian Donaldson and Mark Finnane. Perth, WA, Australia: University of Western Australia Press.
Funding
Supervision
Availability
- Emeritus Professor Ian Lilley is:
- Not available for supervision
Supervision history
Completed supervision
-
2022
Doctor Philosophy
Interpreting Central Anatolian heritage: the construction of place and identity in Neolithic archaeological sites in Turkey
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Andrew Fairbairn
-
2021
Doctor Philosophy
The rights of Indigenous people in archaeology and cultural heritage using a case study from lutruwita / Tasmania
Principal Advisor
-
2020
Doctor Philosophy
Living Heritage Has A Heart: Sacred Space, Site Conservation, and Indigenous Participation at Cham Sacred Sites in Vietnam
Principal Advisor
-
2019
Doctor Philosophy
A political ecology study of forest wilderness in the Olympic Peninsula (USA) and Tasmania (Australia).
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Richard Martin, Emeritus Professor David Trigger
-
2004
Doctor Philosophy
Investigations towards a late holocene archaeology of Aboriginal lifeways on the southern Curtis Coast, Australia
Principal Advisor
-
2023
Doctor Philosophy
Nutritional Security, Gender, and Community-Based Fisheries Management in the Pacific: A Case Study from Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands
Joint Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Simon Albert, Associate Professor Ian Tibbetts
-
2024
Doctor Philosophy
Liquid Heritage: The Birth and Evolution of Tulou Society
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Richard Martin, Dr Kim de Rijke
-
2023
Doctor Philosophy
The Making of Intangible Heritage in Chinese Ethnic Minorities: An Ethnographic Study on Intangible Cultural Heritage, Power, Identity and Social Changes in Bulang Ethnic Group
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Lisa Ruhanen, Dr Richard Martin
-
2022
Master Philosophy
Regenerating Quandamooka Weaving: Solving the knot
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Sally Butler
-
2021
Doctor Philosophy
From specimen to person: determining provenance and identity for Aboriginal human remains held in museums
Associate Advisor
-
2014
Master Philosophy
An investigation of sustainable spinifex-harvesting and knowledge revival: A case study in northwest Queensland
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Susanne Schmidt, Professor Paul Memmott
-
2012
Doctor Philosophy
'Talking the Talk, Walking the Walk': A Journey from ancient stories to modern narratives in Yugambeh country, exploring tradition and authenticity in contemporary Aboriginal Australia.
Associate Advisor
-
2012
Doctor Philosophy
The Way it Changes Like the Shoreline and the Sea: The Archaeology of the Sandalwood River, Mornington Island, Southeast Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Paul Memmott
-
2012
Doctor Philosophy
Social relations and layered identities in a remote Aboriginal town, Mornington Island, southern Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Paul Memmott, Emeritus Professor David Trigger
-
2010
Doctor Philosophy
Taiwanese Aboriginal Literature since the mid-1980s: Discourse, History, and Identity
Associate Advisor
-
2010
Doctor Philosophy
Mining the Landscape: Finding the social in the industrial through an archaeology of the landscapes of Mount Shamrock
Associate Advisor
-
2009
Doctor Philosophy
Investigating Lapita subsistence and pottery use through microscopic residues on ceramics: methodological issues, feasibility and potential
Associate Advisor
-
2007
Doctor Philosophy
A Technological Analysis of a Neolithic Lithic Workshop at Bai Ben, Vietnam
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Chris Clarkson
-
2006
Doctor Philosophy
AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE INSTANT: ISSUES IN THE INTERPRETATION OF MICROSCOPIC ARCHAELOGICAL RESIDUES
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Andrew Fairbairn
-
2004
Doctor Philosophy
Indigenous knowledge and education
Associate Advisor
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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