Date Range
Date Range
Date Range
Annual Review of Anthropology, Climate Change, Anthropocene. This is a guest post by Sean Seary. A Hartwick College graduate interested in understanding human interactions with biological and social environments, and how anthropology can use that knowledge to mitigate the impacts of globalization and global climate change. Seary wrote this review as part of a January 2015 internship to help curate an issue of Open Anthropology.
A work in progress by students and lecturers from Lampeter.
Your window into the world of Anthropology. Thursday, December 16, 2010. One of the most useful ways to study relationships between different people in any given social group is to study how they are related to each other. A kinship diagram allows anthropologists to map out the different relations between people so that they can get a better idea of how those relationships function.
Friday, November 21, 2008. From the point of view of IPs, we are but mere stewards of land, owned by it rather than owners of it. This brings to mind the words of the brave and inspiring Kalinga pangat. You ask us if we own the land.
By admin on May 17. Emma Crewe, social anthropologist and research associate at SOAS, the University of London, published an op-ed.