AIA News

December 11, 2024

2025 AIA Awards Spotlight – Anna Marguerite McCann Award for Fieldwork Reports


Congratulations to the individuals, projects, and publications that received AIA Awards. They will be formally recognized at the 2025 AIA Awards Ceremony, which will take place during the 126th Annual Meeting. We have contacted this year’s winners to gather insights about their projects, experiences, and what inspired them to pursue a career in archaeology.


Michael Galaty (University of Michigan)

Award: Anna Marguerite McCann Award for Fieldwork Reports

Project Description: Northern Albania is a region of key archaeological and historical importance, home to large castles and wealthy tombs. It is also a great place to study how and why human society in this part of the world shifted towards greater inequality through time.

What drew you to archaeology?

As a kid, I always wanted to be an archaeologist, without really knowing what that meant. Once in college, I majored in anthropology. I studied abroad in Greece and did a field school in Arizona. I loved the adventure that came with archaeology, but I also became more and more interested in what the past had to teach us about our present, about the origins of inequality, for example.

Tell us about your history with the AIA:

I have been an AIA member since the mid 1990s and have served on a number of AIA committees, including as chair of the program committee and as an academic trustee.

What’s next for you professionally?

I am currently directing the Museum of Anthropological Archaeology at Michigan, a post I have held since 2017. Once my term as director is over, I hope to get back to teaching and writing.

How did you get started on your project?

The PASH project began as a collaboration with my colleague Lorenc Bejko, from the University of Tirana, Albania. Shkodra, Albania is a fascinating archaeological region, and we wanted to survey it. It is home to numerous archaeological sites from all periods of the past, including impressive castles and wealthy tumulus burials, but these are all under threat as the city grows. It is also a perfect laboratory for studying changes in social complexity and inequality during the Bronze Age, which became a primary goal of the project.

I think it is worth emphasizing that the print field report is accompanied by an extensive online data archive. All of our data are available to anyone, open-access.


Lorenc Bejko (University of Tirana)

Award: Anna Marguerite McCann Award for Fieldwork Reports

What drew you to archaeology?

I was born and raised in one of the most prominent historic towns of Albania (Berat, a World Heritage Site since 2007). ‘The past’ has been every day and everywhere present in the earlier part of my life in the form of archaeological remains, historic architecture, traditions, rituals, and a distinguished ‘spirit of place’. The decision to pursue the study of the past was thus a logical consequence of an existential interest in explaining the co-existence of the old and the new within the limits of my small world. It was, however, as much the result of a personal choice, as a product of strict planning by the state authorities, that had the final word on the future careers of the young citizens in the Communist Albania of the 1980s.

Tell us about your history with the AIA:

I came in contact with the AIA during my graduate studies at the Department of Archaeology, Boston University in the middle of 1990s. I have been regularly a member of the AIA since then. In 2009-2010 I have been a Samuel H. Kress Lecturer and since 2011 a Corresponding Member of the AIA.

What’s next for you professionally?

I am currently working on two major publication projects that focus on the population history of the southern Albania in the late prehistory. I am also involved on almost day-to-day basis with the assessment of heritage preservation projects in Albania, particularly those connected to the country’s World Heritage Sites.

How did you get started on your project?

Dr. Michael Galaty and I had collaborated for more than one decade before we decided to join our research interests and institutional capacities on a project focused on the area of Shkoder in northwestern Albania. We have co-directed the project from its inception in 2010 to the final publication of its results and analyses in 2023. The Millsaps College, Mississippi State University and the University of Michigan where Mike has served during this period, and the University of Tirana (my university) have provided all the possible support for the project, which has become through these years the point of reference for the training and careers of dozens of Albanian and American students and young professionals.


Questions? Learn more about AIA Awards here or reach out to awards@archaeological.org

support Us

The AIA is North America's largest and oldest nonprofit organization dedicated to archaeology. The Institute advances awareness, education, fieldwork, preservation, publication, and research of archaeological sites and cultural heritage throughout the world. Your contribution makes a difference.