Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Prospect Archaeology: digging up the past and fighting for a better future
From its roots as a gentleman's imperial pursuit, to being treated as a hobby in the recent past, full-time archaelogy workers today number in the many thousands and are now successfully organising their industry, reports SEAN MELEADY

TRADE unionists are often accused in living in the past by sections of the hostile right-wing press, but in the tough working conditions of the 2020s even those who dig up the past are unionising — and threatening to down trowels. Far from living an Indiana Jones style high life, archaeologists are facing multiple pressures including low pay, poor site safety, bullying and forced overtime.

Archaeology has, in some quarters at least, a reputation for elitism due to the legacy of the 19th and 20th-century archaeologists who spent months if not years, travelling abroad, particularly in the Middle East, partaking in what today we might consider graverobbing. There was also a class snobbery against self-taught archaeologists such as the working-class Basil Brown and women such as Peggy Piggott who both worked on the Sutton Hoo excavation from the British Museum.

There is also a stereotype of archaeology being full of enthusiastic amateurs — almost a kind of hobby. This therefore justifies low wages — or indeed no wages at all — as many digs rely on volunteers who it is believed should just be grateful to be there, even if the dig is thousands of miles away from home in southern Europe or the Middle East.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Features / 30 December 2023
30 December 2023
SEAN MELEADY takes a look into the largely non-unionised world of video games workers, where a dedicated branch of the IWGB is making organising inroads – and attempting to beat ‘the crunch’
Features / 6 December 2021
6 December 2021
SEAN MELEADY explains how Nautilus International has been making waves in an industry where workers face particular uncertainty as Covid has swept the globe
Features / 6 January 2020
6 January 2020
For four decades a Spanish village and its remarkable mayor have expropriated and collectivised land, running their socialist project as a giant co-operative, where everyone toils in common for the same wage – and it's working, reports SEAN MELEADY
Features / 19 September 2019
19 September 2019
SEAN MELEADY relays the story of how Nautilus International is making waves organising the thousands of workers on giant luxury yachts
Similar stories
School support staff members of Unison during a rally outside the Scottish parliament in Holyrood, Edinburgh, September 27, 2023
Features / 20 June 2025
20 June 2025

Almost half of universities face deficits, merger mania is taking hold, and massive fee hikes that will lock out working-class students are on the horizon, write RUBEN BRETT, PAUL WHITEHOUSE and DAN GRACE

A view of a corner flag before the Emirates FA Cup fourth ro
Men’s football / 6 March 2025
6 March 2025
DAVID CONWAY writes how recognising trade unions for non-playing staff could help the club rediscover success both on and off the football pitch
Britain / 24 October 2024
24 October 2024
SOLIDARITY: Maziar Gilaninejad (left) and Kemal Ozkan of Ind
Features / 6 September 2024
6 September 2024
Metalworkers' leader MAZIAR GILANINEJAD talks to Codir about his union’s fight for better working conditions in the perilous oil and gas sector and the Iranian government's collusion with ‘oil mafia’ contractors