Where are the highest-paying jobs in archaeology? How are women faring in the discipline? Does graduate training properly prepare students for the job market? The Society for American Archaeology recently surveyed its entire membership and other American archaeologists to assess the state of the profession. The results were startling, tracking a discipline rapidly expanding beyond its academic roots through the explosive growth of government and private sector archaeology. Gender inequality has become more subtle, though it is still evident. These and other important insights form the core of the first sytematic attempt to capture the state of the discipline in terms of training, job and salary distribution, research interests, publications, and funding. Over 150 figures and tables. Published in cooperation with the Society for American Archaeology
Melinda A. Zeder is an Associate Curator of Old World Archaeology and Zooarchaeology at the Center for Archaeobiological Research, Smithsonian Institute.
chapter 1 List of Illustrators chapter 2 Foreward chapter 3 About the Author chapter 4 Acknowledgements chapter 5 Taking the Pulse chapter 6 Profiling the American Archeologist chapter 7 Educating the American Archeologist chapter 8 Archeological Employment in the Americas chapter 9 Archeological Research in the Americas chapter 10 Publication and Professional Activities chapter 11 Paying for American Archeology chapter 12 What's Next? chapter 13 Bibliography chapter 14 Appendix
A lot of fascinating information to be found in this account, with many interesting parallels for British archaeology.