Tomomi Fushiya
Researcher
Archaeology
Leiden University
Netherlands
Biography
Tomomi Fushiya holds a BA from Waseda University (Tokyo, Japan) and a MA in Managing Archaeological Sites from University College London, with a dissertation focusing on developing a methodology towards local community involvement in site management. She has worked on site assessment and management projects, conservation training programmes and excavations with different international institutions in Japan, US, UK, Lebanon, Egypt and Sudan, before she started her PhD research in 2015 at Leiden University.
Research Interest
Her main research interests are public archaeology, heritage management, cultural landscape, heritage education and cultural heritage studies. She focuses on the roles of archaeology, local integration into archaeological practices and heritage management, and use of different media and collaborative approaches for engagement, promotion and interpretations of archaeological heritage in Egypt and Sudan. Her PhD research comprises a case study of the relationship between archaeology and local communities in the modern Nubian region of northern Sudan, in order to elaborate an alternative approach to archaeological ‘heritage’ that foregrounds local context.
Publications
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Fushiya & T. (2016), Integrating Narratives: Creating Stories of Archaeology in a Local Language.
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Fushiya & T. (2016), Exploring Public Archaeology in Sudanese Nubia.
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Fushiya & T. (2010), Archaeological Site Management and Local Involvement: case study at Abu Rawash, Egypt, Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites 12(4): 324-355.