University College(UC): Faculty - W Koolage Associate professor of cultural and medical anthropology at the University of Manitoba who studies indigenous societies of northern North America. http://www.umanitoba.ca/colleges/uc/faculty/koolage.html
Extractions: E-mail: koolage@cc.umanitoba.ca Index to the Arctic Blue Books Home Page: http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/anthropology/bluebooks/index.html Koolage taught cultural and medical anthropology and maintains research interests in circumpolar regions and Australia. His latest project has been to organize the publication of Dr. Andrew Taylor's Index to the Arctic Blue Books (British Parliamentary Papers on exploration in the Arctic 1818-1878.).
UCSD: Department Of Anthropology Main Page students Biological anthropology (link); Anthropological Archaeology (link); Social, cultural, and Psychological anthropology, including http://www.anthro.ucsd.edu/
Extractions: Tel: 1-858-534-4145, Fax: 1-858-534-5946 Click desired link. Return to this page by clicking the word "Anthropology" at the top of main site pages. Express Link to Upcoming Courses A NTHROPOLOGY is a humanistic social science dedicated to understanding the worldwide diversity of social institutions and cultural traditions. It is well represented at UCSD. The research interests of department faculty range over a broad range of topics, and we invite you to visit our "faculty" section to get a sense of them. There are a number of areas of particular strength of special interest to potential students: UCSD's Department of Anthropology offers undergraduate major and minor programs both in general anthropology, and with concentrations in biological anthropology or in anthropological archaeology. There are also research opportunities, internships, and a senior thesis program. There is also an undergraduate
ETHNOLOGY Dedicated to offering the broadest range of general cultural and social anthropology of any anthropological journal in the United States. Subscription information and submission guidelines. http://www.pitt.edu/~ethnolog/
Extractions: Robert Cardoso de Oliveira, Brazil; Laurel Bossen, Canada; Esther Goody, England; Maurice Godelier, France; T. N. Madan, India; Koentjaraningrat, Indonesia; Eileen Kane, Ireland; Don Handelman, Israel; Alessandro Lupo, Italy; Takao Sofue, Japan; Netherlands; Bruce G. Biggs, New Zealand ; Wande Abimbola, Nigeria ; Frederik Barth, Norway; Slovakia; Spain ; Ulf Hannerz, Sweden. Ethnology was founded in 1962 by George P. Murdock with the goal of offering the broadest range of general cultural and social anthropology of any anthropological journal in the United States. Ethnology has achieved wide circulation throughout the United States and the world and a deserved reputation as one of the most literate anthropological journals. Specifically
Leacock, Eleanor Burke Eminent American cultural anthropologist recognized primarily for her enthohistorical studies of the subarctic Innu and her contributions to feminist anthropology. http://www.indiana.edu/~wanthro/leacock.htm
Extractions: May 7, 1998 Eleanor Burke Leacock Eminent American cultural anthropologist Eleanor Burke Leacock is recognized primarily for her enthohistorical studies of changing social and gender relations of the subarctic Innu, her contributions to feminist anthropology, her examination of racism in US school systems and her reconsideration of the work of Lewis Henry Morgan and Fredrick Engels. Her prolific career, which spanned four decades, was marked not only by a long list of academic accomplishments, but also by her intense activism to fight race, sex and class discrimination. Leacock, who was known as Happy to her friends, was born on July 2, 1922 and grew up commuting between her familys farm in Northern New Jersey and their apartment in Greenwich Village. Her father, Kenneth Burke, was a renowned literary critic and social philosopher and her mother, who had received a masters degree in mathematics and taught secondary school. Although Leacocks parents offered no obvious criticism of sexism during her childhood, her father often worked at home and on the farm, her parents shared outdoor chores. Because of this, their lifestyles did not fit the expected gender roles of that era. In the city, her parents social set included artists, political radicals and writers who would discuss revolutionary thinkers, such as Marx, at social gatherings. The values she absorbed in her formative years mixed respect for manual labor that was characterized by the farming community and the intellectual integrity and independence that distinguished the writers and artists of Greenwich Village. "I grew up, then, to be scornful of materialist consumerism; to valueeven reverenature; to hate deeply the injustices of exploitation and racial discrimination and to be committed to the importance of doing what one could to bring about a socialist transformation of society." (Leacock, 1993, 5) These early experiences clearly influenced how she approached the field of anthropology and the Marxist and feminist tendencies that became the hallmark of her work.
Kulttuuriantropologia Series in anthropology, University of Helsinki. 1. Teuvo Laitila (2001) Soldier, Structure and the Other social relations and cultural categorisation in the http://www.helsinki.fi/antropologia/research.htm
Kavita Misra Conducts research in medical anthropology, culture of biomedicine, AIDS, cultural politics and social movements, sexuality, transnationalism in South Asia. Williams College. http://www.williams.edu/AnthSoc/misra.htm
Extractions: MAJOR INTERESTS SELECTED PUBLICATIONS (with Veena Das, Abhijit Dasgupta and Ishita Ghosh) "Scientific and Political Representations: The Cholera Vaccine in India." Working Paper Series, Center for Development Economics, Social Science and Immunization Country Study: India. No. 5, 1997. "Productivity of Crises: Disease, Scientific Knowledge and State in India". The Economic and Political Weekly . XXXV (43, 44): 3885-3897, 2000.
Department Of Sociology And Anthropology As a major in this field, the student will examine the influences that come from interactions with people and other influences that come from the large social structures. In adding a comparative perspective, anthropology helps in understanding practices in a broader crosscultural context. http://www.fairfield.edu/academic/artsci/majors/sociolog/ugsodept.htm
Extractions: Undergraduate Arts and Sciences Business Continuing Studies Engineering ... Ignatian Residential College Graduate American Studies Business Education and Allied Professions Engineering ... CT Writing Project Academic Resources Center for Academic Exellence Academic Advice Faculty Search Academic Calendar ... Home Page General Sociology Links For more information about the Department please e-mail Dennis Hodgson Chair.
Dr. Alan Sandstrom, Director Of The IPFW Anthropology Program Research interests are in cultural ecology, cultural materialism, economic anthropology, religion, ritual, and symbolism. He has conducted ethnographic field research among Tibetans refugees in India and has spent over 30 years among Nahua Indians of Mexico. IPFW. http://www.ipfw.edu/soca/Bioars.htm
Extractions: Alan R. Sandstrom is a cultural anthropologist with interests in cultural ecology, cultural materialism, economic anthropology, religion, ritual, and symbolism. He has conducted ethnographic field research among Tibetans in exile in the Himalaya region of Himachal Pradesh, northern India, and for over 30 years among Nahua Indians of northern Veracruz, Mexico. He is editor of the Nahua Newsletter , an international publication covering the history, language, and culture of Nahuatl-speaking and related peoples in the Mesoamerica culture area. The newsletter is received by nearly 400 subscribers in 15 countries. He is President of the Central States Anthropological Society (2000-2001) and Coordinator of the Anthropology Program at IPFW. He was recently selected as a Distinguished Professor by the Mexican Academy of Sciences and the Center for Research and Advanced Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS) in Mexico. He has been awarded a number of grants including a Research Fulbright, an American Council of Learned Societies research fellowship, and a research grant from the American Philosophical Society. He is currently at work on a book on Nahua religion; see selected publications Selected Academic Publications: Books and Monographs 1978 The Image of Disease: Medical Practices of Nahua Indians of the Huasteca. Monographs in Anthropology. No. 3. Columbia: Dept. of Anthropology, University of Missouri-Columbia. 60 pp.
Anthropology Profile of this University of Buffalo professor. Research interests include simulation methods, demography and marginal cultural areas in the US, Europe, and Phillipines. http://wings.buffalo.edu/anthropology/Faculty/zubrow.htm
Extractions: Email: zubrow@buffalo.edu Anthropological and Archaeological theory and method, social policy of heritage and disability, Nordic archaeology, ecology, simulation methods, demography, marginal cultural areas; Finland, Norway, England, Northeast 2003 The Atlas of Literacy and Disability, with Marcia Rioux, Mary Stutt Bunch and Wendy Miller. Canadian Abilities Foundation. Toronto. 2003 Rioux, M., E. Zubrow, A. Furrie, W. Miller, and M. Bunch. "Putting Literacy and Disability in Perspective." Abilities Magazine, 54.
Winterthur Portfolio Publishes articles on the arts in America and the historical context within which they developed. WP's articles highlight research from America's early colonial period through the twentieth century and present a diversity of innovative perspectives on American material culture with findings from various disciplines such as literature, decorative arts, ethnology, American studies, folk studies, art history, cultural history, archaeology, cultural geography, architecture, anthropology, and social, intellectual, and technological histories. http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/WP/home.html
Hsain Ilahiane Professor at Iowa State University whose primary research focuses on natural and cultural resource management, ethnicity and social mobility, and technological and agricultural change. http://www.public.iastate.edu/~anthr_info/anthropology/Ilahiane.htm
Extractions: Hsain Ilahiane Ph.D. 1998, University of Arizona, Assistant Professor, Social Anthropology, Ethnic Stratification, Agrarian Societies, Economic and Social Development, Arid Lands Ecology, Middle East, especially Morocco. Hsain Ilahiane is an assistant professor of anthropology. Dr. Ilahianes primary research focuses on natural and cultural resource management, ethnicity and social mobility, and technological and agricultural change. He has carried fieldwork in Morocco and in the southwestern United States (among the Tohono Oodham, the Hopis, the Paiute, and the Colorado River Indians). He interned at the World Banks department of natural resources, and he consulted for the USAID, the USDOE, Care International and the FAO. He authored "Small-Scale Irrigation in a Multi-ethnic Environment" (1996, Journal of Political Ecology ); "The Berber Agdal Institution" (1999, Ethnology) ; "Spanish Balconies in Morocco" (1999, In Charting Memory, Garland Press); Estevan de Dorantes, The Moor or the Slave?: The Other Moroccan Explorer of New Spain (2000, The Journal of North African Studies); "The Ethno-politics of Irrigation Management in the Ziz Oasis" (2001, In
Anthropology Research specialist at the University of Buffalo who studies warfare, social structure and cultural ecology of peoples of the Caribbean and West Africa. http://wings.buffalo.edu/anthropology/Faculty/otterbei.htm
Extractions: Email: keitho@acsu.buffalo.edu Topics: Political Anthropology (law and war), Social Structure (family organization and folk housing) Areas: Caribbean, West Africa, and American South Methodologies: Cross-cultural research, Ethnographic research methods 2002 When War Began. Boulder, Westview Press. (in preparation) 2001 Dueling. In Green, Thomas A, ed., Martial Arts of the World: An Encyclopedia, Santa Barbara, ABC-CL10 Publishing, 1:97-108. 2001 War. In Michie, Jonathan, ed., Reader's Guide to the Social Sciences, London, Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 3:1746-1747. 2000 The Doves Have Been Heard from, Where Are the Hawks. American Anthropologist 102:841-844. 2000 Five Feuds: An Analysis of Homicides in Eastern Kentucky in the Late Nineteenth Century. American Anthropologist 102:231-243. 2000 The Killing of Captured Enemies: A Cross-Cultural Study. Current Anthropology 41(3):439-443.
PAF Public Archaeology Facilty At Binghamton University A research center within the Department of anthropology of the State University of New York at Binghamton,specializing in cultural resource management. http://paf.binghamton.edu/
Extractions: The Public Archaeology Facility (PAF) is a research center within the Department of Anthropology specializing in Cultural Resource Management. PAF's primary goal is to train archaeologists to be field and research specialists within a cultural resource management (CRM) framework. PAF's research focus is the Northeastern United States with an emphasis on the Susquehanna, Chenango, and Chemung Valleys of New York and Pennsylvania. Students receive intensive mentoring in the legal, administrative, and research management of archaeological projects through a variety of grants and contracts awarded to PAF.
The Biological Anthropology Web An interactive site for discussions and information on the biological and cultural aspects of human variation and adapatation. http://www.bioanth.org/
Extractions: Kelly Webworks The Bio logical Anth ropology Web KM Kelly Call For Papers BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND OSTEOARCHAEOLOGY (BABAO) 6th Annual Conference - 10th-11th September, 2004 will be jointly hosted by the Department of Archaeology and the Department of Anatomy at the University of Bristol. The deadline for receipt of abstracts is Friday 25th June 2004. Contributions from postgraduate students are especially welcome. Further details and registration forms can be downloaded from: www.bris.ac.uk/depts/anatomy/kings/welcome/html The Maryland Essays in Human Biodiversity Journal is looking for any paper dealing with topics on human variation and biodiversity.
Home - Arizona State Museum The oldest and largest anthropology museum in the region, bringing to life the cultural history of the Greater Southwest, from the mammoth hunters to the present. Admission, exhibit, membership and volunteer information. http://www.statemuseum.arizona.edu/
School Of Communication :: SFU Courses in applied media studies; cultural industries; public information and policy; history, theory and critical media studies; information technology and society; international communication; political economy. Minor program in Publishing, joint majors in Business Administration, Latin American Studies, Sociology and/or anthropology. http://www.sfu.ca/communication/
Extractions: SFU Home News Archive Tech Note: CMNS web site If the new Communication site doesn't seem to look quite right... more Submissions to the CMNS Web Site Welcome If you would like to contribute to the SFU CMNS web community... more Events Archive Upcoming Conferences The summer brings some interesting conferences that you may want to... more Submit a Highlight kweipi(kwei[5],"Highlights","r"); // kwei [0] [Highlights] [highlights] Upcoming Defenses Ms. Gina Bailey June 7, 2004 Short-Circuiting Democracy? The Paradox Of Competition In Newspapering And Why We Can't Get 'There' From 'Here'. more Past Defenses Starting from the past semester, CMNS graduate program graduates will be... more
The University Of Chicago:: Committee On Human Development:: Welcome!! Research and graduate study in life course development, mental health, personality, and emotions, cross cultural studies (including psychological anthropology and cultural psychology), and biosocial psychology. The Committee also offers a training program in clinical psychology. http://humdev.uchicago.edu/
Social Anthropology At The University Of Manchester Offers undergraduate and graduate degree programs, the International Centre for Contemporary cultural Research and the Granada Centre for Visual anthropology. Features faculty listing, student exchange program information, seminars and news. http://les.man.ac.uk/sa/
Extractions: at the University of Manchester Text only Feedback A-Z You are here: Home News Department Staff ... University Home Search The Department of Social Anthropology at Manchester University has long been recognised, both nationally and internationally, as one of the foremost centres for research and teaching in the subject in the United Kingdom. Contributions made by individual members of staff have sustained the reputation of the Department, confirmed, once again, by a 5 rating being awarded in the most recent Higher Education Funding Council's Research Assessment Exercise, and by a grade of 'Excellent' in the latest HEFCE review of the quality of teaching. Where are we?
DVRAC HOME Preserves and provides public access to the Hedgpeth Hills petroglyph site and interprets the cultural expressions found there, and serves as a center for rock art studies. http://www.asu.edu/clas/anthropology/dvrac/
Extractions: PETROGLYPH PATHFINDERS SUMMER CAMP 2004 STORY TIME Introducing children ages 3-6 to archaeology, rock art, Sonoran Desert plants and animals, and contemporary Native American communities. January - May 2004 Schedule: April 23rd: Ladybugs May 14th: Squirrels Fridays 10am - 11am Program Fee: Children: $1.00 Accompanying Adults: Free (per two children) Extra Adults: $2.00 Older Siblings: $2.00 DVRAC Members: Free! Pre-registration is required; special bookings accommodated. 623.582.8007