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Brexit: a View From Johannesburg

This post is a translation and an adaptation of the Italian-speaking radio report that was broadcast on 28 June on Radio Bullets. By Gaia Manco The UK vote…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Human Economy Blog

Brexit: a View From Johannesburg

This post is a translation and an adaptation of the Italian-speaking radio report that was broadcast on 28 June on Radio Bullets. By Gaia Manco The UK vote…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Human Economy Blog

Rubber Barons’ Abuses Live On in Memory and Myth

The Kukama people who live along the lower part of Peru’s Marañón River tell intergenerational myths that recollect the violence and trauma of the rubber era, which peaked in…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Leonardo Tello Imaina and Barbara Fraser

Remaking the Museum for the 21st century

Several months ago, Robert Fogarty asked if I wanted to contribute something to a special issue of The Antioch Review called “The Future of Museums.” I did! It’s been…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Grant

Links & Contents I Liked 189

Hi all, Welcome to an almost Brexit-free link review that focuses on the mundane absurdities, LOLs, but also thoughtful insights that a week in development communication has to…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Tobias Denskus

Aboot the Canadian "about"

Canadians — like the authors of anthro everywhere! — are pretty used to hearing English-speakers from the US and elsewhere in the world poke fun at our accents,…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Rhiannon Mosher

Book Forum––Sabine Arnaud’s On Hysteria by Todd Meyers

  Sabine Arnaud’s On Hysteria: The Invention of a Medical Category Between 1670 and 1820 focuses on the socio-medical category before its better-known (and more heavily studied) late ninet…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Todd Meyers

On the UK Referendum

by Jane K. Cowan For me, the UK referendum story began a year ago with another referendum: that of Greece. Elected in January 2015 on a promise to end…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By guestanthropologist

#Brexit, Europe and Anthropology: time to say something

Brexit means trouble, that is for certain; what is less certain is what kind of trouble. Some might sympathise with the immediate response of Chris Gregory (ANU): “I…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Sarah Green

Racing for what? #Slow

In this post, Ruth Mueller explores how the compulsion for speed in academia plays out in the lives of postdocs.  Slow science is interesting for me because I…

  • Post date 1st July 2016
  • Post author By Ruth Mueller

The myth of millennials

My latest for Quartz is on the danger of generalizing generations: Three years ago, TIME magazine published a cover story called “The Me Me Me Generation—Millennials are lazy,…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Sarah Kendzior

Web Roundup: Ethical Technology, Moral Medicine by Emily Goldsher-Diamond

Researchers at MIT have launched Moral Machine, a web project to help gauge human perspectives on “moral decisions made by machine intelligence.” The project comes in the wake…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Emily Goldsher-Diamond

Brexit: a View From Scotland

By John Bryden On Thursday 23 June, two of the four constituent nations of the formerly United Kingdom – England, and Wales – voted to leave the EU,…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Unknown

Brexit: a View From Scotland

By John Bryden On Thursday 23 June, two of the four constituent nations of the formerly United Kingdom – England, and Wales – voted to leave the EU,…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Human Economy Blog

Brexit: a View From Scotland

By John Bryden On Thursday 23 June, two of the four constituent nations of the formerly United Kingdom – England, and Wales – voted to leave the EU,…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Human Economy Blog

Anthro Blogging 101: Allegra Lab

In this edition of Anthropology Blogging 101, we welcome Miia Halme-Tuomisaari and Julie Billaud, Editors in Chief at Allegra Lab. Tell us a little about Allegra Lab. How did it…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Emma Louise Backe

Brexit: a View From Scotland

By John Bryden On Thursday 23 June, two of the four constituent nations of the formerly United Kingdom – England, and Wales – voted to leave the EU,…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Human Economy Blog

Nick Cheesman, “Opposing the Rule of Law: How Myanmar’s Courts Make Law and Order” (Cambridge UP, 2016)

Working against the tendency to conflate the analytic categories “rule of law,” and “law and order,” Nick Cheesman’s Opposing the Rule of Law: How Myanmar’s Courts … Visit…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Jothie Rajah

Was bedeutet der Brexit für Flüchtlinge?

Großbritannien blieb weitgehend abgeschottet von der Flüchtlingskrise, die im vergangenen Jahr viele andere Länder Europas erschüttert hat. Geschützt durch die Geographie und den Status außerhalb des …

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Kristy Siegfried

In the Journals – June 2016, Part II by Anna Zogas

We have three special issues to conclude our highlighting of new articles in June! Here they are: Surveillance and Embodiment: Dispositifs of Capture, in Body & Society Perspectives on patienthoo…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Anna Zogas

Charting New Territory

The Intersection of Language and Geography When most people think about linguistic geography, if they think of it at all, they think of dialect atlases such as the…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Anna Babel

Treasure from trash: how mining waste can be mined a second time

Mines typically follow a set path from prospecting, to development, to extraction and finally closure as the finite resources are exhausted. But does that really need to be…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By guestauth0r

New research article on ritualized conference spaces & the evolution of peace research professionalism in Germany

As it often happens in academic journal publishing my latest article From Social Movement to Ritualized Conference Spaces: The Evolution of Peace Research Professionalism in Germany has been…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Tobias Denskus

Book Review: My Life with Things: The Consumer Diaries by Elizabeth Chin

Haidy Geismar, UCL Anthropology My Life With Things: The Consumer Diaries by Elizabeth Chin, 2016. Duke University Press. My Life with Things is an engaging, quirky, auto-ethnography detailing key…

  • Post date 30th June 2016
  • Post author By Haidy Geismar
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