Mesolithic Prehistoric Policies Research

‘Prehistoric Policies’ research project secures British Academy funding

A research project looking at how ideas of prehistory are used by policy makers has been awarded funding from the British Academy’s Knowledge Frontiers programme.
A dramatic but not very accurate 19th century view of hunter-gatherers. (Frank Gilbert 1882)
A suitably dramatic but not very accurate 19th century view of hunter-gatherers. (Frank Gilbert 1882)
Dr Ben Elliott.
Dr Ben Elliott. UHI Archaeology Institute.

A research project looking at how ideas of prehistory are used by policy makers in Britain and Ireland has been awarded substantial funding from the prestigious British Academy’s international Knowledge Frontiers programme.

The Orkney-based UHI Archaeology Institute will lead an international team of researchers on the Prehistoric Policies project, with Dr Ben Elliott working in collaboration with Dr Alice Rudge of SOAS, University of London, and Professor Graeme Warren of University College Dublin.

The project focuses on Just Transition policy, which seeks to ensure that the benefits and costs of the move towards Net Zero are distributed equally across society.

Dr Alice Rudge
Dr Alice Rudge. SOAS.

These policies, and the sources used to support them, are guiding major decisions about our collective future, and often refer to ideas about shared aspects of human behaviours that emerged during prehistory.

Prehistoric Policies was awarded £268,937 by the British Academy, the two-year project’s goal being to better understand the tendency to evoke a prehistoric past when Just Transitions are envisioned in Britain and Ireland.

It will:

  • ​Look at the evidence used to support these ideas and plot the influence they have on Just Transition policies.
  • Critically analyse the role of popular science within this process.​
  • Provide guidance for policymakers wanting to access expert scholarship.​
Professor Graeme Warren. University College Dublin.

Welcoming the funding, Dr Rudge described the project as “an amazing opportunity to explore in more depth how ideas about the deep past are shaping our environmental futures.”

Dr Elliott added: “Prehistoric Policies is a fantastic opportunity for us to examine the power of prehistory, and the role that it is playing in shaping Just Transition policy. I can’t wait to work with this exciting team of researchers, who bring together expert knowledge on human societies in both the past and present, around an interest in the way our shared human heritage is understood within wider society.”

 “I’m delighted to be part of this team with two outstanding colleagues and excited to be exploring how ideas about the prehistoric past are shaping our present and future,” said Professor Graeme Warren.


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