Anthro in the news 2/17/14

• Lessons learned about AIDs?

The Washington Post published an op-ed by medical anthropologist, health advocate, doctor, and professor at Harvard University, Paul Farmer.

Paul Farmer
Paul Farmer/Wikipedia

He asks whether, a decade after the global AIDS response began in earnest, the lessons learned will be sustained over time and used to fight other diseases. He notes the similarities between the prevalence of chronic hepatitis C infections today and AIDs in the 1990s.

Hepatitis C inflicts 170 million people worldwide, is the leading indication for liver transplant in the United States, and a common cause of liver failure around the world. For some, however, Hepatitis C is about to become curable thanks to the knowledge doctors and researchers gained fighting AIDs.

• Source your chocolate

Cultural anthropologist Mark Schuller, anthropology professor at Northern Illinois University, writes in The Huffington Post about where chocolate comes and options for the future. He highlights a documentary film, “Nothing Like Chocolate,” by sociologist Kum-Kum Bhavnani of the University of California at Santa Barbara.

Noting that over 40 percent of the world’s chocolate comes from Côte d’Ivoire, the film documents the violence behind its harvest, including civil war and child labor. It reveals the growing consolidation of the chocolate industry by transnational agribusiness corporations like Nestle and Hershey’s who continue to buy up small producers.

On a more positive note, the film highlights an alternative to this process in the Grenada Chocolate Company: “Within 5 years, the co-operative was producing 9 to 10 tons of local organic chocolate. Nothing Like Chocolate looks at this revolutionary experiment, focusing on how solar power, appropriate technology and activism merge to create a business whose values are fairness, community, sustainability and high quality.”

Continue reading “Anthro in the news 2/17/14”

Call for submissions: Journal of Religious Studies, History and Society

Dear colleagues,

The Journal of Religious Studies, History and Society (Revista Ciências da Religião – Historia e Sociedade) is a fully peer reviewed, open-access, Brazilian publication of the Religious Studies Department of Mackenzie University (Brazil). It’s a biannual Journal for the purpose of advancing scholarship in the study of religion that publishes original research articles, reports and book reviews that reflect the wide variety of research being carried out by scholars of religion in all countries.

The Journal invites submissions from all academic disciplines in the arts, humanities and social sciences, including but not limited to sociology, anthropology, history, psychology, philosophy and theology. Articles will be considered on any topic that bears upon any religious tradition.

All submissions should be formatted according to the Chicago Manual of Style. The deadline for submission is February 25, 2014. Manuscripts on English, Portuguese or Spanish should be submitted by e-mail.

Submissions should be emailed to the Journal Editor, Dr Suzana Coutinho, at suzana.coutinho@mackenzie.br.

Journal URL http://editorarevistas.mackenzie.br/index.php/cr,

Contact for queries and submissions: suzana.coutinho@mackenzie.br.

My best regards,
Suzana

Valentine’s Day goes global and so much news about it!

It’s fascinating to see how certain holidays spread around the world, and how they are marked, celebrated, and “localized” in different countries and regions and among different groups. Valentine’s Day is clearly going global, but with many regional and local permutations. Some of those variations have to do with the very fact that Valentine’s Day is associated with love and romance and, let’s face it, sex. Here are some news bits about Valentine’s Day 2014 around the world.

Cupid
Cupid. Flickr/Arwen Willemsen

Just wanting somebody to love:

In France, Internet dating rises before Valentine’s Day. According to an article in The Global Times, “The Internet is powering Cupid’s wings in France, with use of online dating sites soaring, according to matchmakers preparing to help singletons maximize their seduction opportunities this Valentine’s Day. Of the 18 million single people in France “one in two uses Internet dating,” said Jessica Delpirou, director in France of the Meetic dating website, which was launched in 2001 and recently taken over by the US website match.com. The run-up to St Valentine’s Day — before New Year resolutions are forgotten — is a particularly busy time. “

What’s Valentine’s Day all about?

Continue reading “Valentine’s Day goes global and so much news about it!”

Job announcement: U.S. Bureau of Land Management

The Bureau of Land Management, Socioeconomics Program announces recruitment for a term GS-11/12 position, as a planning – environmental analyst (social sciences), based in Washington, DC.

The appointment will be for a minimum of 13 months, but may be renewed for up to 4 years, if continued funding, program needs, and suitable performance allow.  The recruitment is open to all citizens.  Qualifications include academic preparation in a social science discipline (such as resource or environmental economics, cultural anthropology, sociology, or human geography) and experience in natural resource management.

Deadline: The application period closes March 4th, 2014.

The link to the recruitment announcement is here: https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/361521300.  Please read carefully “How to Apply” and “Required Documents” in the recruitment announcement.

BLM’s Socioeconomics Program handles a growing range of assignments, from assessing the human impacts of extractive resource uses to valuing ecosystem services, modeling urban growth, documenting the subsistence needs of indigenous groups, implementing environmental justice principles, and optimizing the effectiveness of conservation planning.

For further information on our work, please see the BLM Socioeconomics Strategic Plan.

The BLM manages more land – approximately 245 million acres – than any other Federal agency, primarily located in 12 western states, including Alaska. The Bureau also administers 700 million acres of federal sub-surface mineral estate. The BLM’s multiple-use mission is to sustain the health and productivity of the public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations. For additional information about Bureau of Land Management, please visit www.blm.gov.  This position is located in the Division of Decision Support, Planning and NEPA, Directorate of Resources and Planning, Washington, D.C. 

For questions on the application process, please contact Latese Alexander

phone: 202-912-7321
email: lalexander@blm.gov 

For question’s on BLM’s socioeconomics program, please contact Rob Winthrop
phone: 202-912-7287
email: rwinthro@blm.gov

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Planning and Environmental Analyst (Social Sciences), GS-0301-11/12Announcement No: WO-DEU-2014-0004

Opens: February 11, 2014

Closes:  March 4, 2014

Location: Washington, DC

Promotion Potential: GS-12

Moving expenses are not authorized

  • Open to All U.S. Citizens – No previous Federal Service is required.  This is a Term Appointment Not To Exceed 13 months with possible extension up to a total of 4 years.
  • This position is located in the Branch of Decision Support within the Division of Decision Support, Planning and NEPA (WO-211) in Washington, DC.

Click below to view the live link:

https://www.usajobs.gov/GetJob/ViewDetails/361521300

DC event: Water, conflict and peacebuilding in development: lessons for practitioners

The Environmental Change and Security Program and Middle East Program are pleased to invite you to the Wilson Center

Join us for the launch of USAID’s Water and Conflict Toolkit for Programming, a document designed to help development practitioners gain a deeper understanding of the forces driving violence and instability related to water. Written by USAID’s Office of Conflict Management and Mitigation, the Wilson Center, and Group W Inc., the toolkit provides guidance to development professionals not familiar with water and conflict dynamics, with the aim of developing more strategic and focused interventions.

Panelists will discuss what needs further investigation to inform this kind of programmatic strategy, the challenges in this field of study, and how the toolkit addresses those shortfalls.

Where: Woodrow Wilson Center at the Ronald Reagan Building, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
6th Floor Flom Auditorium

When: Monday, February 24, 2014, 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Featuring:

  • Gidon BrombergIsraeli Director, EcoPeace / Friends of the Earth Middle East
  • Chris KosnikDirector, Office of Water, U.S. Agency for International Development
  • Sandra RuckstuhlSenior Social Scientist, Group W Inc.
  • Aaron WolfProfessor of Geography, Oregon State University

Moderator:

  • Geoffrey D. DabelkoSenior Advisor, ECSP; Director of Environmental Studies, Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs, Ohio University

<< RSVP Here >>

Note: Photo identification is required. Please allow additional time to pass through security.

Want to attend but can’t? Tune into the live or archived webcast at WilsonCenter.org (not every event is webcast live; archived webcasts go up approximately one week after the meeting date).

Join the conversation on Twitter by following @NewSecurityBeat and find related coverage on our blog at NewSecurityBeat.org.

“Wrestling on the page” about contemporary Tibet

On the Insight Tibet blog, Dr. Tashi Rabgey, research professor in international affairs at GW, reports on a talk by Dr. Tenzin Jinba, professor of sociology and anthropology at Lanzhou University, China, and is currently a program fellow in agrarian studies at Yale University.

The February 3 event was sponsored by the Tibet Governance Project of the Elliott School’s Institute for Global and International Studies. It was entitled: Gender, Identity Politics and State-Society Relations on the Sino-Tibetan Frontier and was based on the author’s 2014 book, In the Land of the Eastern Queendom: The Politics of Gender and Ethnicity on the Sino-Tibetan Border (University of Washington Press, 2014).

Dr. Rabgey applauds Dr. Jinbo for: “…his willingness to wrestle on the page with…questions of Tibetan identity politics, he has not only provided a refreshing new standpoint on the politics of ethnicity and ethnic representation in the context of Tibet…[and] he has also thrown down the gauntlet for the debate-to-come about the collision of Tibetan and Chinese nationhood.”

DC event: Ethno-linguistic research with Himalayan communities

The Smithsonian Institution’s Recovering voices series presents at talk on Shamans, Activists, and Word Hunters: Ethno-linguistic Research Collaborations with Himalayan Communities by Sara Shneiderman, Yale University, and  Mark Turin, University of Cambridge and Yale University.

When: Friday, February 14th, 3:30 pm

Where: Rose Room, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC

This presentation addresses the dynamics of long-term research partnerships with historically marginalized communities. The presenters will discuss the ethnographic, linguistic, and political dimensions of their collaborations with members of the Thangmi community in the eastern Himalayas over almost 20 years, as an anthropologist and linguist respectively. Thangmi is an endangered indigenous Tibeto-Burman language spoken by a community of the same name in India and Nepal.

 

Note: attendees without Smithsonian credentials will need to be escorted to the seminar room, which we are happy to do. If you need an escort please email rouvierr@si.edu at least 24 hours before the lecture.

If you would like to be added to the Recovering Voices events mailing list, please send a message to rouvierr@si.edu.

 

2014 anthropology methods courses supported by the National Science Foundation

Now in its tenth year, the SCRM (Short Courses on Research Methods) program is for cultural anthropologists who already have the Ph.D. Two, five-day courses are offered during summer 2014 at the Duke University Marine Lab in Beaufort, North Carolina.

Now in its tenth year, the WRMA (Workshops in Research Methods in Anthropology) program offers one-day workshops in conjunction with the national meetings of the American Anthropological Association and the Society for Applied Anthropology.

Now in its third year, the DCRM (Distance Courses in Research Methods in Anthropology) is open to upper division undergraduates, graduate students, and professionals. Five courses are offered in summer 2014:

  • Text Analysis
  • Geospatial Analysis
  • Network Analysis
  • Video Analysis
  • Methods of Behavioral Observation.

The development of these fee-based courses is supported by the National Science Foundation. Enrollment is limited to 20 participants.

Opportunity: Residential Scholar in Anthropology at the University of Arizona

The University of Arizona’s School of Anthropology is seeking applications for the School’s Summer 2014 Residential Scholar. Deadline for application is February 23, 2104.

The school encourages applications from all fields of anthropology. During residency, the scholar will be expected to contribute to the teaching mission in the School of Anthropology through a lecture, workshop, or other form of scholarly interaction.

For more information:  http://anthropology.arizona.edu/node/405