Anthro in the news 8/30/10

This week’s anthropology in the news is the final posting made with the assistance of Graham Hough-Cornwell. For the past year, Graham has been a vital force behind the blog from inspiration, contributing his own posts, editing, photo-research, publishing posts, checking analytics, and more. He is now moving on to intensive study of Arabic this [...]

Food For Thought: 21st Century Perspectives on Ethnobotany

This event is hosted by the Departments of Botany and Anthropology of the National Museum of Natural History in collaboration with the United States Botanic Garden and supported by the Cuatrecasas Family Foundation. The Ninth Annual Smithsonian Botanical Symposium September 24-25, 2010, Washington, DC

Cruise ships to heaven: Mauritius expands tourist sector

Guest post by Sean Carey Mark Twain famously quoted a local person in his 1897 travelogue, Following the Equator: “You gather the idea that Mauritius was made first, and then heaven; and that heaven was copied after Mauritius.” Anyone lucky enough to fly to the Indian Ocean island will understand something of why this sentiment [...]

Anthro in the news 8/23/10

• If Clef were president Louis Herns Marcelin, a Haitian-born cultural anthropology professor at the University of Miami is paraphrased in the Seattle Times as saying that people with money and influence in Haiti are more likely to fear outsiders. • About the mosque (you know which one) An article in the Huffington Post discussed [...]

The floods in Pakistan

An interview by Maggie Ronkin with Fayyaz Baqir, Director of the Akhter Hameed Khan Resource Center, Islamabad, Pakistan MR: What regions of Pakistan and sectors of the population are affected most by the tragic flooding? FB: Vast swathes of land in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (previously the Northwest Frontier Province), Southern Punjab (the Siraiki region of the [...]

Anthros requesting assistance on a new project

Via WAPA we recently received this request for contributions from Carol J. Ellick and Joe Watkins: Joe Watkins and I are in the process of revising a manuscript for Left Coast Press and we need your help to broaden the perspective.  “The AnthropologyGraduate’s Guide: From Student to Career” is intended to provide practical steps that [...]

Paul Farmer in the news

Blogger’s note: I depend largely on my Google reader system to feed me the anthropology news every week for my weekly round-up of “Anthro in the news.” But a lot that is anthropological goes on under the covers, so to speak: it is just not named “anthropology.” Out of curiosity, I went to Google news [...]

What lurks at the margin for indigenous peoples

Guest post by Morgan Keay This post is an analytical literature review, with bibliography, of recent sources that use anthropological methods to explore threats to indigenous peoples, the implications of the threats/factors, and the responses of indigenous groups. It was originally prepared for a graduate seminar at George Washington University on “Culture, Risk and Security” [...]

Anthro in the news 8/16/10

• Put out the fire Experts are debating how to stop the fires in Russia which are now spreading under the surface and how to deal with the smoke and fumes. Lisa Curran, professor of environment and anthropology at Stanford University, studies peat fires. The Wall Street Journal quotes her on their health effects: “There [...]

Nuclear news, nuclear fears and the role of science

Guest post by Barbara Rose Johnston I received last week copies of two very different publications reporting on outcomes from the scientific assessment of life in a nuclear warzone. These studies consider, first, the health experience of resident populations living in areas contaminated by nuclear weapons fallout, and, second, the health of people as affected [...]