In
Mandatory Palestine, Yeiven was an active member of the
Jewish Palestine Exploration Society, serving as its chair between 1944 and 1946. Speaking at a meeting of the society in Tel Aviv in 1934, he celebrated archaeologists' "discovery of Hebrew Palestine" in excavations at
Tell Beit Mirsim,
Tel Megiddo, and
Tel Lachish in the previous decade. Later he participated in the first ''yedi'at ha-Aretz'' ("Knowledge of the Land") conference, organised by the society in
Jerusalem in 1943, arguing for the expansion of regional museums to educate Jewish settlers about the antiquities of the country. He also took part in excavations at
Luxor (1924),
Beit Shean (1924–28),
Seleucia (1929–37) and was the co-director, with J. Krause-Marquet, of excavations at
Ai in 1933. After the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, Yeivin was appointed the inaugural director of its Department of Antiquities and Museums, which succeeded the
Department of Antiquities of Mandatory Palestine and is now known as the
Israel Antiquities Authority. He held the position until 1961. In 1962 he established the Department of
Ancient Near Eastern Studies at Tel Aviv University (later the
Tel Aviv University Institute of Archaeology) in 1962. He was succeeded by
Yohanan Aharoni in 1968. He received the
Bialik Prize for Jewish Thought in 1955 and the
Israel Prize in 1968. ==Selected publications==