 |
Overview
|
Medical Anthropology Faculty
|
Instructions for Applicants (Program & Course Information)
The Medical Anthropology Program introduces students to major theoretical
approaches to health, medicine and society. The program is research oriented
and emphasizes political economy, post-structuralism, interpretive theory
and critical analysis of health care and health policy.
Medical Anthropology at Michigan State University focuses on:
- Health and Political Economy
- Health Policy
- Medical Systems
- Ethnicity, Class, Gender, and Health Inequality
- Medicine, Science and Technology
- Religion, Ritual and Healing
- Alternative Medicine and Ethnomedicine
- Culture of Biomedicine
- Bioethics
- Psychological Anthropology
- Anthropology of the Body
- Environment and Health
- Health and Subjectivites
- Geographic Areas: Africa, Asia, Caribbean, Latin America, United
States
Training in the program includes graduate seminars in medical anthropology
and course work tailored to meet students' interests. Additional course work
includes the department's requirements in sociocultural or biocultural anthropology.
Graduates hold faculty positions in the U.S. and abroad as well as in nonacademic
employment. The latter include positions evaluating government programs, administering
medical services, overseeing the review of medical research proposals, and
carrying out research on health. The Medical Anthropology Faculty have specific
collaborations with a variety of centers and institutes across MSU including: African
Studies Center, Asian Studies
Center, Center for Advanced Study of International
Development, Center
for Ethics and Humanities in the Life Sciences, Center
for Latin American & Caribbean Studies Julian
Samora Research Institute, Women & International
Development Program.
Recent M.A. and Ph.D. Research by Graduate Students:
coming soon...
|
 |