Hire Ed: Job Market Dynamics for Tenure-Track Faculty Positions in Archaeology

Figure 6. Visualization of topics mentioned in job ads on the Archaeology pages of the Academic Jobs Wiki: (A) frequency of topics mentioned in the text of the job ads; (B) popularity of topics in job ads over time for topics that appear in 20 or more ads. Individual data points are shown, overlain by a locally weighted regression line for each location to indicate temporal trends.
Marwick, B., Poole, A. M., Zhang, A., Shafizadeh, S., and J. Beck (2025). Hire Ed: Job Market Dynamics for Tenure-Track Faculty Positions in Archaeology. American Antiquity. http://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2025.10117

Many archaeology graduate students pursue advanced degrees in the hope of undertaking an academic career. Job-listing websites often serve as the first port-of-call for students seeking academic positions. We examined tenure-track job advertisements over the past decade to gain insights into the academic job market for archaeologists. Using data from the community-edited Academic Jobs Wiki for Archaeology, we examined changes in the academic job market over time. We investigated the editing dynamics of the Wiki to understand its users and their biases. We then analyzed the text of 431 job ads posted from 2013 to 2023. Our analysis addresses the question of how archaeological topics, methods, and geographic regions specified in archaeological job ads have shifted over time. We also explored whether the labor burden for applicants has changed over time: do institutions request more information and documents from applicants at the initial stages of application, compared to a decade ago? Finally, we assessed the influence of sociopolitical factors on the changing focus of research topics in the field. We conclude with implications for archaeology students, graduates, and advisors seeking to understand the dynamics of the academic job market and the requirements of employers.

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