The historic preservation field finds itself in a moment of intense introspection, critique, and change. While the traditional preservation methods of listing, legal protection, architectural history, and restoration still have their place, other, emergent methods of interpretation, management, storytelling, community engagement and adaptive reuse are urgently being explored.
Jean B. Boebel Assistant Professor of Historic Preservation in the University of New Orleans
Mia BayRoy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Chair in American History, University of Pennsylvania
Priscilla Hancock CooperFounding Director of the Alabama African American Civil Rights Heritage Sites Consortium (AAACRHSC)
Dr. Kwesi DanielsDepartment Head, Assistant Professor Taylor School of Architecture and Construction Science, Tuskegee University
Dr. Glenn T. EskewDistinguished University Professor, Georgia State University
Hasan Kwame JeffriesAssociate Professor, Ohio State University
Dr. Turkiya L. LoweNational Park Service Supervisory Historian and acting Federal Preservation Officer
Randall F. MasonFaculty Director
Andrea RobertsDirector of The Texas Freedom Colonies Projectâ„¢ and an Assistant Professor of Urban Planning, and co-founder of the African American Digital Humanities Working Group at Texas A&M University