Prior to joining the Institute of Archaeology in 1990, Sue Hamilton taught archaeology at
Birkbeck College and the
Polytechnic of North London. Working alongside
Christopher Tilley and
Barbara Bender, from 1995 to 2000, she was co-director of the
Bodmin Moor Landscapes Project (better known as the
Leskernick Project), a seminal study in archaeological phenomenology, focusing on the moor's
Neolithic and
Bronze Age landscapes, and published in the book,
Stone Worlds: Narrative and Reflexivity in Landscape Archaeology (2007). This work was followed, from 2002 to 2013, by the Tavoliere-Gargano Prehistory Project, which she co-directed with Ruth Whitehouse, and in which the principals of sensory archaeology, developed out of the Leskernick Project, were worked through in the context of the Neolithic
villaggi trincerati (ditched villages) of southeast Italy. Her work on this project was published in a much referred to
European Journal of Archaeology article,
Phenomenology in Practice (2006), and in the book
Neolithic Spaces (2020)
. Overlapping with the Tavoliere Project, from 2006 to 2015, she was co-director with Colin Richards, of the
AHRC-funded Rapa Nui Landscapes of Construction Project, researching the archaeological and landscape contexts of
Rapa Nui/ Easter Island's celebrated
moai. In doing so, she and Professor Richards became "the first British archaeologists to work on the island since 1914." The Rapa Nui Landscapes of Construction Project is ongoing under her leadership. After a distinguished career in research, teaching and university administration, Sue Hamilton became the first permanent female director of the
UCL Institute of Archaeology on 1 September 2014. ==Bibliography (selected)==