There are a huge variety of case studies which demonstrate the range of ways to deliver public benefit. Some examples of these which can be accessed from the CIfA website are
Articles
- Birmingham Park Street Burial Ground: ethics and community engagement, Mary Ruddy, The Archaeologist 109
- Bloomberg and Mithras: becoming stewards of London’s heritage - article from CIfA 2019 Yearbook
- Bristol’s brilliant archaeology, Kate Iles, The Archaeologist 99
- Curating public benefit and the power of ‘Once upon a time…’ - Bruce Mann MCIfA, Aberdeenshire Council Archaeology Service. Article from CIfA 2019 Yearbook
- Economic benefit of archaeology - the A14 - Sadie Watson MCIfA, MOLA
- Engagement with the public through planning-led archaeology: a local government advisor’s perspective - Norman Redhead MCIfA, University of Salford. Article from CIfA 2019 Yearbook
- Enhancing a sense of place and time - Andrew Hood MCIfA, Foundations Archaeology.Article from CIfA 2019 Yearbook
- Know your place, Peter Insole. The Archaeologist 104
- Searching Mersea: coastal archaeology, oral history and rising sea levels, Lawrence Northall, The Archaeologist 108
- Seeing is believing: a call for public engagement in our everyday work - Clemency Cooper, Oxford Archaeology and Nina O'Hare PCIfA, Worcestershire Archive & Archaeology Service
- Why focus on securing a positive archaeology programme as part of your development? - Case study: London’s Crossrail project – securing benefits through the historic environment and archaeology programme, Jay Carver MCIfA, 4AD Consultants Ltd. Article from CIfA 2019 Yearbook
Conference sessions/seminars
- CIfA2019 recordings – the theme for the CIfA2019 Annual Conference in Leeds was Archaeology: values, benefits and legacies including
- The Sherford Community, old and new: changing client’s attitudes to community engagement, Gareth Chaffey
- Wellbeing and the historic environment: what now? Linda Monckton
- Developing projects with social impacts, Cara Jones
- CIfA2018 Brighton
- The problem with archaeology is archaeologists, Neil Redfern