Education
PhD (Scholarship Funded), University College London. The Economic Capital of Archaeology: Measurement and Management
MA Public Archaeology (Scholarship Funded), University College London
BA (Hons) Archaeology and Anthropology (First Class), Cambridge
Publications
Full list of publications available at: https://ucl.academia.edu/PaulBurtenshaw
I also regularly peer review for numerous journals including International Journal of Heritage Studies, Journal of Cultural Heritage and Sustainable Development, and Public Archaeology. I am on the editorial board of Present Pasts journal.
Positions
Senior Director of Monitoring and Evaluation, World Monuments Fund (2024+)
Sustainable Preservation Initiative, Director of Projects (2014-2019)
Part-time Lecturer, Chapman University (2020)
Honorary Lecturer, University College London
Affiliate Researcher, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California Los Angeles
Research Fellow, Council of British Research in the Levant, British Institute in Amman, Jordan (2013-14)
Graduate Attache, British School of East Africa, Ghana (2008)
Speaking, Teaching and Research
I have spoken at numerous conferences and have been an invited speaker at UNWTO, UCLA (Anderson School of Management, Cotsen Institute of Archaeology), MOLA, Cambridge Heritage Research Centre, NEARCH Project, British Institute at Ankara, Council of British Research in the Levant, Leiden University, Association of Danish Museums, Ostrom Workshop at Indiana University Bloomington, and United Nations Innovation Center, Antigua and Barbuda. I taught on the recent Dialogues of the Past course on heritage, economics and sustainability. I am currently a lecturer of ‘Creative and Cultural Industries and Sustainability’ at Chapman University, California.
I have also taught courses at University College London (MA in Public Archaeology, MA in Cultural Heritage, PhD Methods, BA in Archaeology) and Chapman University, USA. I was the leader of the Archaeology and Development Research Network while at University College London, which raised awareness of the contribution of archaeology to sustainable development agendas and established networks between academics, politicians and development organizations.