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Amber Wiley

Amber Wiley

Director of the Institute for Quality Communities (IQC)

Amber Wiley.

  • George Washington University
    PhD American Studies
  • University of Virginia School of Architecture
    MA Architectural History, Historic Preservation
  • Yale University
    BA Architecture

Amber N. Wiley, Ph.D., serves as the Director of the Institute for Quality Communities. Wiley has over 20 years of experience in teaching, research and professional practice in historic preservation, architecture and community engagement. She has dedicated her career to advancing the history and narrative of design and preservation in Black communities, as well as advocating for theoretically rigorous, thoughtful and inclusive expansions of preservation policy and practice. Wiley is committed to interdisciplinary approaches, applied learning opportunities for students, and addressing critical issues of equity and justice.

She believes that cultural and educational institutions must actively engage the communities they serve and increase accessibility through innovative partnerships. Wiley earned her Ph.D. in American Studies from George Washington University, a Master’s in Architectural History and a Certificate in Historic Preservation from the University of Virginia, and a B.A. in Architecture from Yale University.

A graduate of Oklahoma public schools, she currently serves on the board of the Oklahoma Foundation for Excellence. Amber is a native of Oklahoma City with roots in Washington, DC, Maryland, North Carolina, and Arkansas.


  • Graham Foundation Grant to Individuals, Publication Grant, Model Schools in the Model City: Race, Planning, and Education in the Nation’s Capital, 2024. $7000
  • Furthermore Publishing Grant in Art, Architecture, and Design, Model Schools in the Model City: Race, Planning, and Education in the Nation’s Capital, 2023. $4000
  • Mellon Foundation, Humanities in Place, Henry Ossawa Tanner House, 2023. $150,000
  • Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice Research Grant, Rutgers University, Collective Yearning: Black Women Artists from the Zimmerli Art Museum, 2022. $8000
  • Mellon Foundation, Humanities in Place, African American and Civil Rights Heritage and Preservation Programs, 2021. $750,000
  • National Endowment for the Humanities, Collaborative Research Grant, Principal Instigator on sub-award; David Rifkind, Project Director, Architecture of the African Diaspora in/of the United States, 2021. $13,499
  • Dumbarton Oaks, Harvard University, Mellon Fellowship in Urban Landscape Studies, “‘The Revolution Continues’: The Legacy of the Black Heritage Movement,” 2021. $62,000
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Global Architectural History Teaching Collaborative, Mellon Foundation, Architecture of the African Diaspora in/of the United States, 2020. $1650