LARRY NESPER Interests include culture and identity, ethnicity, ethnohistory, political and legal anthropology, social and religions movements, tourism, performance, Native North America, especially the Great Lakes region. Ball State University. http://www.bsu.edu/csh/anthro/nesper/lnres.htm
Extractions: Curriculum Vitae Larry Nesper, Assistant Professor Department of Anthropology Muncie, Indiana 47306-0435 lnesper@bsu.edu EDUCATION UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Ph.D. 1994 Department of Anthropology. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO M. A. 1977 Masters of Arts Program in Social Sciences. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY B.A. 1973 Anthropology/Philosophy/Religion Pattern ACADEMIC POSITIONS BALL STATE UNIVERSITY. Fall 1997- Assistant professor, Department of Anthropology. Courses: History of Anthropology, , Indians North America Survey, Special Topics in North American Ethnography: Tribal Sovereignty, Indians of the Great Lakes, Ethnohistory, Introduction to Cultural Anthropology. Graduate course in the Scope of Cultural Anthropology. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO LABORATORY SCHOOLS 1977-1988, 1991-1992, 1993-1997. Senior Teacher. Courses: Humanities, American History, Early World History, European History, World History and geography. Middle school faculty chairman. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO Spring 1993. Frederick Starr Lecturer in the Department COLUMBIA COLLEGE 1992. Lecturer. Course: Introduction to Anthropology.
Sociology And Anthropology Part of the School of social Science at the University of Wales, Swansea. http://www.swan.ac.uk/sociology/
Lars T. Rodseth anthropology professor at the University of Utah who researches historical anthropology, kinship and social organization in Tibet and Nepal. http://www.anthro.utah.edu/rodseth.html
Trinity College Anthropology Department Programs which focus on cultural anthropology, the interpretive study of human beings as they have lived in social groups throughout history and around the world. http://www.trincoll.edu/depts/anth/
Extractions: Faculty Listing ... Anthropology Hot Links Our Newsletter Archives: Trinity Anthropology Newsletter #3, October 2000 Trinity Anthropology Newsletter #2 , May 2000 Trinity Anthropology Newsletter #1 , November 1999 *Updates pending - Webmaster (11-1-02) The Trinity Anthropology Newsletter is published bi-annually, at mid-term, and is free to students, faculty and staff. To reserve a copy, to submit an article, or to comment, please send us a note!
GLENN DAVIS STONE Professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis whose research focuses on social, spatial, and political aspects of agriculture, sustainability, and biotechnology. http://artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/blurb/b_gds.html
Extractions: Images My research is on environmental anthropology and political ecology: I study the social and political aspects of agricultural systems, population increase, and agricultural biotechnology. I have worked on ancient, historic, and contemporary nonindustrialized farmers in Africa, India, and North America. My Nigerian research examined social and agricultural change among Kofyar and Tiv populations during 40 years of rising population density. I used the Kofyar's archetypal example of intensification to study social organization of labor and landscape in a highly productive, sustainable system. Comparative research on Tiv showed different responses to land scarcity, including belligerence and the manipulation of local political processes to avoid intensification. A larger aim of this work has been development of stronger models of agricultural change that recognize cultural context and agency. My work on Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazis) concerns political and agricultural responses to population increase over longer time spans. This work also provided a model of ecological parameters of intensification.
Extractions: @import /* hide from IE5 */ url("http://www.jcu.edu.au/includes/styles/JCUstyles.css"); Web Sitemap Search A-Z Index Contacts ... Campus Maps Quick Links Information For Prospective Students International Students Current Students Alumni Visitors Staff Jobs at JCU Information About The University Research Faculties and Divisions Library and Computing Services Welcome from the Executive Dean About the Faculty Cairns Campus Research Focus ... Faculty Search
WIEST Professor of anthropology at the University of Manitoba who studies social organization, political economy, gender roles, migration and rural development in Mexico and Bangladesh. http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/arts/anthropology/wiest.html
Bucknell University Department Of Sociology And Anthropology Sociology offers a wide variety of theories, numerous methods, and values from which to judge the fairness of social orderings. anthropology explores the diversity and integrity of other cultures, and shows the value of other ways of life. http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/soc_anthro/
Department Of Anthropology Research interests in religion, symbolism, social organization, language, ecological anthropology, and culture change. Northern Illinois University. http://www3.niu.edu/anthro/people/faculty/molnar.htm
Extractions: Assistant Professor Professor Molnar is a broadly trained cultural anthropologist with special interests in religion, symbolism, social organization, language, ecological anthropology, and culture change. Her areal specialization is Southeast Asia, especially Indonesia. She has conducted field research with the Hoga Sara, Hoga Taka, and Soa cultural groups of west-central Flores and the Manggarai people of west Flores in eastern Indonesia. Ongoing research focuses on culture change, specifically, on the effects of recent rapid agricultural and economic modernization on the indigenous belief system, land tenure, ecology and gender relations of the people of Flores island in Indonesia. New research focus also extends to the Kemak people of East Timor, Asia's newest nation, with a long-term project beginning in 2002. Grandchildren of the Gae Ancestors: Social Organization and Cosmology of the Hoga Sara of Flores. Leiden: KITLV Press, 2000.
Home - School Of Sociology And Anthropology - University Of Canterbury Explores the way societies are structured, relationships between people and the regular and patterned ways we behave in our everyday social life. General information on administration, Sociology and anthropology Teaching Programmes, research, resources and handbooks. http://www.soci.canterbury.ac.nz/
Extractions: Scanning Text Search Search the School's web pages below or view the A-Z School Site Contents or try the University search Staff web access to Outlook Student access to Web Mail UC Student (staff only) Library Anthropology Portal ... IT Department Send comments, suggestions and feedback to the webmanager
Anthropology Professor at the University of Buffalo researching kinship, culture, historical methods, and contemporary social change in Southeast Asia. http://wings.buffalo.edu/anthropology/Faculty/banks.htm
Extractions: Email: apybanks@acsu.buffalo.edu Social anthropology, kinship, culture, historical methods, contemporary social change; Southeast Asia, Malaya From Class to Culture: Social Conscience in Malay Novels Since Independence. Yale Southeast Asia Studies. Monograph Series, no. 29 (1988). Malay Kinship (Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues, 1983). Changing Identities in Southeast Asia. Editor (The Hague: Mouton, 1976). APY 106-BAN Introduction to Cultural Anthropology
Weber State University Social And Behavioral Sciences Includes criminal justice, history, aerospace studies, army ROTC, political science, philosophy, psychology, social work, gerontology, sociology, and anthropology courses. http://weber.edu/SocialScience
Extractions: The College of Social and Behavioral Sciences is composed of several departments. Each department provides a unique avenue to academic, professional, and vocational competence. The departments ot the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences include Aerospace Studies, Anthropology/Sociology, Criminal Justice, Geography, History, Military Science or ARMY ROTC, Naval Science, Political Science/Philosophy, Psychology, Social Work/Gerontology, and Women Studies.
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.
ASA Pages Now Moved Promoting the study of cultural anthropology, especially in the United Kingdom. http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/ASA/index.html
Extractions: A New Perspective for Anthropology Website by Arnold Perey How can anthropology have a scientific basisa means of understanding and describing cultures and people that is verifiable, free of prejudice, true for all cultures? I present on this website the answer to this tremendously important question that I learned from Aesthetic Realism, the philosophy founded by Eli Siegel. After more than thirty years of study and thought, I say that
Anthro.Net: What Is The Best Practices Award? An award given by peer review for content related to anthropology, archaeology, linguistics, psychology and other social sciences. http://www.anthro.net/guides/award.shtml
Extractions: Peer Reviewed Social Science Site Sites that are awarded Best Practices demonstrate the highest quality in anthropology, archaeology, history, linguistics, psychology and related social sciences on the World Wide Web. These are sites that provide original content that is of a public service to anthropology and other social sciences on the Internet. There are hundreds of thousands of sites on the Internet pertaining to the Social Sciences. Only a small fraction of the sites nominated are given the Best Practices Award Anyone may recommend a site for the Best Practices award with this form . Sites are submitted for peer review by an editorial board. Click here to learn more about becoming a reviewer for this award. The peer review process for the Best Practices Award is essentially similar to those for academic journals and granting agencies. Five reviewers are selected based on their research interests and experience for each site submitted. Reviewers are given a set of guidelines when they join the program, but ultimately they make the final selection. The reviewers vote on the site and the majority rules. The reviewers may or may not choose to share their comments with webmasters. In any event, the review process is anonymous. Webmasters may resubmit their site, but those who abuse this will be barred from further review. Submitting multiple pages from the same site or submitting a site more than once a month is considered to be abuse. Due to the volume of sites submitted, only those webmasters who are given the award are automatically contacted.
The University Of Chicago Press Provide a record of research and review relating to heredity in man and to the application of genetic principles in medicine, psychology, anthropology, and social services, as well as in related areas of molecular and cell biology. http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJHG/index.html
Extractions: Editor: Stephen T. Warren, Ph.D. Journal Description Editorial Board Contact the Editorial Office ... FAQ Latest Articles To appear in The American Journal of Human Genetics, July and August, 2004 May 25, 2004 Abstract Full Text PDF (415kb) PostScript May 25, 2004 Mutations in the Abstract Full Text PDF (312kb) PostScript May 20, 2004 Abstract Full Text PDF (677kb) PostScript May 20, 2004 Mechanism and Timing of Mitotic Rearrangements in the Subtelomeric D4Z4 Repeat Involved in Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy Abstract Full Text PDF (294kb) PostScript May 20, 2004 Yan Feng, Tianhua Niu, Houxun Xing, Xin Xu, Changzhong Chen, Shaojie Peng, Lihua Wang, Nan Laird, and Xiping Xu Abstract Full Text PDF (214kb) PostScript May 20, 2004 Sally John, Neil Shephard, Guoying Liu, Eleftheria Zeggini, Manqiu Cao, Wenwei Chen, Nisha Vasavda, Tracy Mills, Anne Barton, Anne Hinks, Steve Eyre, Keith W. Jones, William Ollier, Alan Silman, Neil Gibson, Jane Worthington, and Giulia C. Kennedy Abstract Full Text PDF (310kb) PostScript May 20, 2004 Allelic Heterogeneity in the Gene Explains Clinical Variabilityin Cohen Syndrome Abstract Full Text PDF (344kb) PostScript May 20, 2004
Social-Cultural Anthropology At University Of Toronto socialCultural anthropology. at University of Toronto. 100 St. George Street social-Cultural anthropology in the News. Tierney s Darkness http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/anthropology/social.htm
Extractions: FAX: (416) 978-3217 Main Faculty Undergraduate Graduate ... Home Social-cultural Anthropology traditionally dealt with kinship, political economy and other social dimensions of non-literate, non-western and often isolated communities which could be observed in their totality. Today, many social anthropologists also study "western" culture and such aspects of complex societies as gender, sexuality, peasantry, ethnic minorities, and industrial work groups. Social-Cultural Anthropology studies institutions and models of social behaviour cross-culturally to establish more general theories about the similarities and differences between human communities and cultures. Colloquium Events Friday, 19 September 2003, 6:00 PM Theorizing Transnationality, Gender, and Citizenship Inderpal Grewal