J. Cameron Monroe is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Director of the Abomey Plateau Archaeological Project in the Republic of Bénin, West Africa. He serves on the editorial board of Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa and has published in various journals, among them Historical Archaeology, The Journal of African History and Current Anthropology. Akinwumi Ogundiran is Professor of Africana Studies, Anthropology, and History at University of North Carolina, Charlotte, and Director of the Upper Osun Archaeological and Historical Project. He is the author or editor of several publications including Archaeology and History in Ilare District, Central Yorubaland; Precolonial Nigeria; and Archaeology of Atlantic Africa and the African Diaspora.
'The maps and illustrations are excellent throughout the volume and the quality of production is very high … It is a very successful product; the chapters combine strong theoretical backbone, drawing on a range of literature worldwide yet never overwhelming, with a detailed, well thought-out presentation of data. These chapters are well-rounded and mature contributions, which demonstrate a remarkable convergence on the themes of landscape and interdisciplinarity. Chances are high that the volume will indeed - as suggested in the foreword - become a reference point in the archaeology of West Africa.' Anne Haour, Antiquity '… a remarkably coherent work that has not a single weak or tangenital chapter … this is a praiseworth volume … also handsomely produced.' Journal of African History 'This is a good and useful collection presenting much innovative and important work on Atlantic era social and political transformations in a range of West African settings. The contributions clearly articulate the necessity of a perspective that looks beyond single sites and considers regional perspectives diachronically in order to derive appropriate (both culturally and politically) frameworks to explain the archaeological and historical trajectories of the various regions. The contributions shed light on new regions of study, as well as previously explored areas, and thus the volume will be useful to scholars of West Africa. By foregrounding the landscape perspective, the contributions in this book will also be of interest to a wider range of archaeologists and historians.' Journal of African Archaeology