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Overview
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Letter from the Chair
Welcome to Department
of Anthropology at Michigan State University.
Over the last 10 years,
the Department of Anthropology has changed in several important ways that will
enable us to reach new and higher levels of excellence. We have added a number
of new faculty, we more actively engage both undergraduates and graduate
students in research, and we have focused our programs on our considerable
strengths.
Anthropology
faculty represent all four traditional subfields
of the discipline (sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology,
biological/physical anthropology, and archaeology). We have particular
geographic expertise in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and North America.
Across these geographic areas, the department
has programmatic emphases in the study of culture, resources, and
power; medical anthropology; forensic anthropology and skeletal biology;
and archaeology. The Department is also known for its emphasis on
Great Lakes anthropology and archaeology. The
faculty's interests span traditional boundaries within the discipline
to include the study of:
- agriculture and the environment, including issues such as agricultural
development and sustainable agriculture; the social, political, and health
impacts of industrial agriculture; and the interactions between culture and
the environment, as well as how such interactions have changed over time
- social inequality and social institutions, including those inequalities
associated with hierarchies in gender, race, ethnicity, age, and class, as
well as corresponding differences in health status, the operation of international
businesses, and how organizations develop and communicate a common culture.
Increasingly, faculty and students are studying how these inequalities translate
into human rights issues.
- public policy and cultural impact assessment, including cultural
resource management in archaeology, ethics and anthropology, and studies
of the impact of public policies on living people. This obviously relates
to the above topic in important ways.
- systems of communication and meaning, including the study of how
people create, transmit, and sustain a common culture, and the meaning that
it has for them
- health and legal issues, involving anthropological perspectives
on health, medical systems, and their interactions with social and environmental
changes. The intersection of anthropology with legal issues also involves
study of business and public policy, and includes forensic anthropology.
Many of the Department’s faculty focus on policy-relevant
research addressing a variety of social problems. Faculty
work collaboratively with communities wherever they
conduct research, and we train our students to understand
the importance of such collaborative efforts. MSU Anthropology
alumni work not only in academia and museums, but also
for local and national governments, non-governmental
organizations, and international businesses.
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