Faye Sayer

Dr.

  • Assistant Professor in Heritage and History Director, International Centre for H, History

Accepting PhD Students

PhD projects

I offer PhD supervision in several areas of heritage, public history and community archaeology, particularly related to the positive and negative impacts the past and its narratives has or can have on society and communities. I welcome collaborations with external partners. I am currently supervising PhDs including ones on heritage Sites and wellbeing (Amy Luck) Downs), sustainability of military museums (Brian Stoor).

20152024

Research activity per year

Personal profile

Biography

I recently joined the University of Birmingham in 2022, to contribute to teaching and research in heritage and public history. Before arriving at Birmingham, I worked at Manchester Metropolitan University as a Reader in Public History and Community Archaeology (2010-2022). Previously I have worked as an associate lecturer from University of Chester, and University of Exeter. Prior to academia I worked for heritage organisations including English Heritage, The Portable Antiquates Scheme, Museum of London, British Museum, Tullie House Museum, and Museum of Central Lancashire.

I am through my research-based consultancy lucky to work with and advise a range of heritage organisation and NGO’s in the UK, US, Palestine, Nigeria, Australia, Europe and India on evaluating community heritage projects. This has included recently Premiere Urgence International, Anxiety UK, Historic England, Solider On!, National Museum Institute, Biltmore Estate, Nemours Estate, Chatsworth House, Well-City Salisbury, Elizabeth Gaskell House, Northern Heartlands and Dulwich Picture Gallery.

I am currently PI for international British Academy project ‘Heritage and Wellbeing: Creating Healthier Societies Through Heritage’ and a visiting fellow at National Museum Institute (India, Delhi). I have published extensively on evaluating and measuring wellbeing in a cultural context, including in the Oxford Handbook of Public Heritage Theory and Practice and I published the textbook Public History: A Practical Guide. 

I am a regular contributor to international network conferences, International Federation of Public Historians (IFPH), National Council on  Public History (NCPH) and European Archaeological Association (EAA).  I am a member of the AHRC's Peer Review College. 

Research interests

I am a public historian and heritage scientist covers a range of periods and geographic areas. I have ongoing interests in the examination and measurement of the myriad social and cultural impacts public history and heritage has to diverse communities. As such, my research forges interdisciplinary synergies between subjects such as healthcare, psychology, sociology, human geography, archaeology, education, and creative arts. I have considerable experience in public engagement and research led commercial projects, and I have worked with various cultural heritage sector organisations including museums, heritage sites, historic house, art galleries, theatres and government agencies.

 

This research seeks to address important contemporary challenges and sustainable development goals including ‘wellbeing inequality,’ and has been awarded a British Academy small grant ‘Creating Healthier Societies Through Heritage’ project (2019-22) and Anxiety UK Harold Fisher research grant (2022-2023). It has been published in the International Journal for Arts and Health (2015) and as a chapter in the Oxford Handbook of Public Heritage Theory and Practice (OUP, 2018) and informed future strategic aims, funding priorities and strategies within the UK heritage sector and government for example Historic England.

 

Public engagement is at the core of both my research and teaching and I have published an internationally textbook ‘Public History: A Practical Guide’ (Bloomsbury, 2019). I work with a range of international heritage organisations, NGOs and charities, government agencies, engaging in a diverse array of cultural activities, including in India, Nigeria, USA, Palestine and UK.  My current research into the preservation, presentation and value of contested and ethically and morally sensitive public histories and heritages has been published. International Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage (2022) and Journal of African Diaspora Archaeology and Heritage (2021) and this research appeared in The Conversation (2022). 

 

I have delivered externally funded local, national, and international public engagement heritage projects and various commercial projects. The NHLF community heritage project ‘Bones without Barriers Project’ led to publication in Archaeologists and The Dead (OUP, 2016), The Historic Environment: Policy and Practice (2014) and Nature (2022). In partnership with Soldier On!, Liverpool John Moore’s, and National Heritage Lottery Fund, I delivered a professional workshop on ‘Wellbeing, Therapy and Heritage’ (2019), developed ‘Guidelines for Heritage Wellbeing.’ This workshop has been delivered international the National Museum in Delhi and Centre for Public History in Institute in Bengaluru and National Council on Public History.

Currently I am collaborating with the historic estates of Biltmore (US), Nemours (US) and Chatsworth (UK) developing public engagement and participatory research projects centred a creative ‘expert by experience’ led programmes as a mechanism to co-develop new ‘storied experiences’ with diverse community. This public engagement and research project will inform future organisational strategic visions to support community wellbeing and human dignity. 

Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals

In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):

  • SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
  • SDG 10 - Reduced Inequalities

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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years

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