Salary range: The current salary range for this position is $80,800 - $128,700 (9-month academic year salary), however, off-scale salary and other components of pay, which would yield compensation that is higher than this range, are offered to meet competitive conditions.
Anticipated start: 7/1/2026
Next review date: Saturday, Nov 1, 2025 at 11:59pm (Pacific Time)
Apply by this date to ensure full consideration by the committee.
Final date: Saturday, Nov 1, 2025 at 11:59pm (Pacific Time)
Applications will continue to be accepted until this date.
Position description
The Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley seeks applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position, in the area of Environmental Change, Resilience, Precarity, and Justice in Archaeology or Bioanthropology with an expected start date of July 1, 2026. The effects of environmental change and ensuing precarity, including disasters, are an area of urgent anthropological concern, especially considering anthropology’s unique ability to understand these issues over the long term and on a global scale. Rigorous theoretical approaches have drawn upon expertise in analytical methods associated with environmental archaeology/bioanthropology (such as paleoethnobotany, charcoal analysis and palynology, stable isotopes, residue analysis, dendrochronology, bioarchaeology, zooarchaeology, hydrology, GIS, soil science) to explore human relationships with, responses to, and impacts on environmental change in the ancient or recent past. Linked to these conditions are questions of sustainability, health, food security, and resilience that are already foci of several faculty in the department, across subdisciplines.
Berkeley’s Anthropology Department is one of the nation’s oldest, and Berkeley anthropologists have had leading roles in defining the discipline’s key questions, including path breaking work in medical anthropology, cultural analysis of technologies, Indigenous archaeology, historical and contemporary Archaeology, preservation and heritage, biocultural approaches to human biology, and the multiple local effects of a transnational world. The department’s faculty today are leaders in a revitalized, contemporary field of research and teaching that aims to highlight and work with knowledge about and from across the world’s populations, adding depth to our understanding of the human condition in the past and present with a vision of a just and sustainable future.
The department is committed to addressing the family needs of faculty, including dual career couples and single parents. We are also interested in candidates who have had non-traditional career paths or who have taken time off for family reasons, or who have achieved excellence in careers outside academia. For information about potential relocation to Berkeley, or career needs of accompanying partners and spouses, please visit: http://ofew.berkeley.edu/new-faculty
The Social Sciences at Berkeley brings together faculty, students, and staff who represent the rich diversity of California, the United States, and the world. Not only is our division the most diverse on campus by any measure, but our members are committed to upholding the university’s principles of community so that every individual can be successful in a healthy, welcoming, and safe environment.
https://ls.berkeley.edu/ls-divisions/social-sciences/diversity-equity-inclusion https://ls.berkeley.edu/about/diversity-equity-and-inclusion
Department: https://anthropology.berkeley.edu/home
Basic qualifications (required at time of application)
PhD (or equivalent international degree), or enrolled in PhD or equivalent international degree-granting program at the time of application.
Preferred qualifications
A Ph.D. or equivalent international degree in the candidates’ field is preferred by the start date.
Candidates should connect their research to discussions in environmental and restorative justice as related to resiliency and impacts on marginalized communities, and their research should adhere to the highest ethical standards in the field. Candidates must be able to significantly contribute to the undergraduate and graduate curriculum in specifically archaeology, although preference will be given to candidates that can contribute to teaching in both archaeology and bioanthropology. Successful applicants will have evidence of an ongoing research program (active research in field sites, museums, and/or archives). Successful applicants will have evidence of teaching effectiveness and mentoring and demonstrated ability to support the success of all students through inclusive curriculum, classroom environment, and pedagogy.
Document requirements
Reference requirements
The cover letter should include the names/contact information for three references (one letter is required at the time of application, and an additional two letters will be solicited by the committee for candidates under serious consideration.)
Apply link: https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF05077
Help contact: [email protected]