This recognition comes close on the heels of Annie being elected to the fellowship of the Australian Academy of the Humanities.
Annie is known for her work on the archaeology of cross-cultural exchange, community archaeology and cultural heritage. She participated in the North Head Quarantine Station in Manly as part of The Quarantine Project, and out of that project co-authored a book that has become part of the HSC curriculum. The book co-authored with Peter Hobbins and Ursula Frederick was also awarded the 2017 NSW Premier’s Prize for Community and Regional History. Annie has also carried out community archaeology on Groote Eylandt since 1991, most recently undertaking a repatriation project, returning her archaeological collections to the Anindilyakwa Land Council.
Annie was nominated by Mirani Litster, Susan O’Connor, Ursula Frederick, and colleague Patrick Faulkner. In their nomination letter they wrote that Annie’s contributions to Australian archaeology will ‘leave a lasting disciplinary legacy’.