Archaeology isn't the first subject that comes to mind when researching wicked problems. Yet, according to this important and intriguing book, archaeology is exactly where we can look to gain small wins that carry us towards resolution. In presenting this case, John Schofield may just have redefined the true purpose of archaeology.
Professor Brian Head, Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland
This book not only offers insightful views on wicked problems but also considers how archaeologists and heritage practitioners might most productively apply their work to concrete solutions. Rather than making exaggerated claims for his disciplines' capacities to solve humanity's existential crises, John Schofield instead advocates a pragmatic long game, accumulating 'small wins' delivered by savvy disciplinary leaders operating as policy entrepreneurs to nudge government and business in the desired direction. Modest, certainly, in the face of such crises, but it is much better to under-promise and over-deliver than the reverse when the future of humankind is at stake!
Professor Ian Lilley, Archaeology, University of Leiden
Wicked Problems is a timely contribution to the scholarship of contemporary archaeology and heritage studies. Covering topics ranging from climate change and pollution to social justice and wellbeing, Schofield shows why archaeological and deep-time perspectives matter in the present and for the future. A book that deserves a broad readership.
Professor Þóra Pétursdóttir, University of Oslo
Archaeology has the ability to travel through time and to consider contemporary phenomena in relation to the deep history of human existence. According to John Schofield, this gives archaeology nothing less than superpowers in tackling some of today's most pressing questions. In this book he shows how our knowledge of the past actually may help guide the way to a better world.
Professor Mats Burström, Archaeology and Classical Studies, Stockholm University
John Schofield is a wide-ranging and innovative book that encourages readers to think about archaeology in an entirely new way, as fresh, relevant, and future-oriented. It examines some of the novel ways that archaeology (alongside cultural heritage practice) can contribute to resolving some of the world's most wicked problems, or global challenges as they are sometimes known.
Dr. Miranda Melcher, New Books Network
The volume presents a critical overview of where archaeology is positioned right now in relation to these wicked problems and how archaeologists could enhance their own contribution to solving them in the future. The book is structured in detailed thematic sections on different wicked problems and how archaeologists have been, and could be, contributing to understanding them and thus help transform the world. Schofield's agenda is intellectualand theoretical but it is also practical and engages with questions of policy, leadership, socialplanetary boundaries and the United Nation's sustainable development goals (SDGs).
Cornelius Holtorf, Antiquity Reviews