Good News Fall 2016

DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY

Message from Chair It is hard to believe that another semester has flown by. I know that I speak for many in our department in expressing my gratitude and thanks for everyone's hard work and contributions to our department. It is a team effort, and our passion for anthropology is the glue that binds and keeps us going through all those busy days. An overview of some of our student and faculty accomplishments follows. The scope is broad: awards, honors, scholarship and practice, media engagement and conference activities. I think you will agree that these accomplishments are impressive. Have a wonderful holiday season! – Michael Paolisso 1

Upcoming Events Winter Commencement Campus-Wide Ceremony Tuesday, December 20, 2016 Individual College & School Ceremonies Wednesday, December 21, 2016 Winter Session January 3-23, 2017 Spring Semester First Day of Classes Wednesday, January 25, 217

Winter Courses ANTH222 Introduction to Ecological and Evolutionary Anthropology Taught by: Miguel Vilar ANTH260 Introduction to Sociocultural Anthropology and Linguistics Taught by: Stanley Herman ANTH263 Sexuality and Culture Taught by: Charneka Lane ANTH266 Changing Climate, Changing Cultures Taught by: Elizabeth Van Dolah

Awards, Honors, and Grants

Katie Boyle received a travel grant to attend PastForward, the National Trust for Historic Preservation Conference in Houston, TX. Katherine Calvert, undergraduate anthropology student, was awarded the Shackel and Little Family Endowed Scholarship in May at the BSOS Scholarship Dinner. Carol Ellick was awarded a Wenner-Gren Innovations in Public Awareness of Anthropology grant. The grant will be used to development content for The Heritage Education Network (THEN) website. THEN is a new membership organization for those who work within the field of heritage education and those using information about heritage. Shirley Fiske was awarded the American Anthropological Association's prestigious Solon T. Kimball Award for public and practicing anthropology. Judith Freidenberg was awarded a Fulbright Specialist Award for 5 years. Katie Geddes, recent MAA graduate, was selected as a finalist for the 2017 NOAA Knauss Marine Policy Fellowship. Katie will be representing NOAA at an Executive Branch office. Kevin Gibbons was awarded an International Graduate Research Fellowship from the Graduate School to participate in a two-year working group on soils & human culture dynamics at the University of Tübingen, Germany.

ANTH448D Special Topics in Archaeology; GIS for Anthropologists Taught by: Lukus Monette

Casey Hall was awarded the Chair's Fellowship to assist the final stages of dissertation research and writing. Her research is focused on exploring how incarceration and reentry may impact women’s perceptions of their identities as mothers.

ANTH469C Advanced Special Topics in Cultural Anthropology; Language and Culture Taught by: Jacqueline Messing

Adriane Michaelis was awarded funding from the BSOS Dean's Research Initiative to help support her summer predissertation fieldwork. 2

Adriane Michaelis received the Maryland Sea Grant Coastal Resilience and Sustainability Research Fellowship. In addition to providing access to professional development activities, the fellowship supports two years of fieldwork for the study "Understanding Decisions to Participate in Oyster Aquaculture in Maryland." Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman was selected to participate in the 2016-2017 University of Maryland ADVANCE Leadership Fellows program, a yearlong professional development program for UMD faculty. Patrick Rivera was accorded Alternate and Honorable Mention status for the Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship. Jen Shaffer received a Research and Scholarship Award (RASA) for Summer 2017. With the help of Kevin McDonald, she will be working on an ethnobotany project using some of her old research data and other archived data sets, "Plant Diversity in Southern Mozambique's Human-Modified Landscapes."

Senior Faculty Specialist Carol Ellick worked with the Hokkaido University Center for Ainu and Indigenous Studies international field school on Rebun Island off the coast of Hokkaido, Japan.

Camille Westmont was named National Trust for Historic Preservation/National Council for Preservation Education 2016 Student Scholar. The paper was presented at the National Trust for Historic Preservation Conference in Houston, Texas. Camille Westmont was selected in an international competition to be a US/ICOMOS International Exchange Intern with Falmouth Heritage Renewal, a grassroots preservation organization established in 1994, in Falmouth, Jamaica.

3 National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis, Megan E. Springate, and U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell announced the release of the first national study on LGBTQ History

Scholarship and Service Janet Chernela wrote an Invited Comment to the article "Conditional Cash Transfers, Food Security, and Health: Biocultural Insights for Poverty-Alleviation Policy from the Brazilian Amazon," in Current Anthropology. Fabio Correa participated in the International Congress on Agent Computing at George Mason University to share the latest developments in the field of agent computing. Fabio Correa participated in a Short Course on Spatial Agent-Based Modeling, SESYNC, Annapolis MD. An introduction to the essential theoretical background and technical expertise needed to conceptualize, build, and analyze agent-based computer models. Judith Freidenberg has been invited to be on the World on the Move Advisory Board, the AAA public initiative on migration. Judith Freidenberg delivered five presentations on her recent book, Contemporary Conversations on Immigration in the United States: The View from Prince George’s County, Maryland. The presentations included a Speaking of Books talk at McKeldin Library, the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission, a AAA People on the Move talk at Busboys and Poets, the Historical Society of Washington, DC Annual Conference, and for Congreso Internacional Lenguas, Migraciones, Culturas (via skype). Judith Freidenberg was interviewed by radio host Pat Thornton on WOL 1450 AM about her recent book, Contemporary Conversations on Immigration in the United States: The View from Prince George’s County, Maryland.

Christina Getrich continued leading her team of UMD anthropology graduate and undergraduates on data collection and analysis for her new research project examining the health and well-being of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients living in Maryland. She received a grant from the BSOS Dean’s Research Initiative to support the project and the team will present results in a variety of different platforms this spring as they work on developing publications from the project. Kevin Gibbons and Adriane Michaelis traveled to southwest Germany this past summer to participate in the first meeting of a two-year joint graduate training program in soil sciences, anthropology, and archaeology. The first season of the project kicked off with an interdisciplinary meeting at the University of Tübingen focusing on Resources in Social Context(s): Curse, Conflict, and the Sacred. Maria Grenchik, MAA graduate, was hired as the Executive Director at the Museum of Chincoteague Island in September. George Hambrecht’s research was discussed in an article in Science (AAAS) magazine titled “Why Did Greenland’s Vikings Disappear,” which focused on fieldwork in Greenland by the North Atlantic Biocultural Organization. George Hambrecht was invited to participate in the Arctic Horizons Workshop hosted by the NSF Office of Polar Programs. George Hambrecht’s research was featured in articles in the New Scientist (“Race to save hidden treasures under threat from climate change”) and in Nature. 4

Judith Lynne Hanna gave a keynote, “Neuroscience Spotlights Dance: The Brain as Modern Dance Choreographer, Performer, and Spectator” at the “Engagement” symposium for the study of the philosophy of dance at Texas State University. Her synthesis of 21st century research revealing some of what has been hidden challenged armchair theorists and phenomenologists. Judith Lynne Hanna, as an expert court witness (132nd case), prepared a declaration on the history and value of burlesque as an art form; the artistic, political and other messages conveyed by nudity, simulated nudity, touch of self or other, and simulated sexual behavior for Visual Arts Collective, LLC, et al. v. Colonel Ralph Powell, et al. in Boise, Idaho. A first-time enforcement of a 1974 Idaho law against a burlesque dancer threatened to close the community mixeduse contemporary fine art gallery and visual and performance art, film, music, and theater venue. Judith Lynne Hanna addressed the Maryland Dance Education Association inaugural conference, Roots to Grow, Wings to Fly at Towson University. Her talk "Dance in the Learning Classroom: Why/ How to Use the Brain as Choreographer" also drew upon new dance-related neuroscience technologies and scientific advances synthesized in her book, Dancing to Learn: The Brain’s Cognition, Emotion, and Movement. Alison Heller, a Campbell Resident Scholar at the School for Advanced Research (SAR), presented her research, “Interrogating the Superlative Sufferer: Experiencing Obstetric Fistula and Treatment Seeking in Niger,” at the SAR opening colloquium in November.

Tracy Jenkins, Mark Leone, Elizabeth Pruitt, Benjamin A. Skolnik, Amanda Tang, and Stefan Woehlke co-curated the Frederick Douglass and Wye House: Archaeology and African American Culture in Maryland exhibition, which is currently on display at the Hornbake Library Special Collections Gallery until July 2017. The archaeology of Wye House involves nine years of excavations examining slave quarters, the industries of the enslaved, the food of all its residents, and how an agricultural economy based on enslavement of African Americans made the plantation wealthy. This exhibition and the scientific research behind it focuses on how this work has been done collaboratively with the descendant communities, both black and white. It attempts to show how enslaved individuals made an independent culture. Thus, the violence that Frederick Douglass sought to end is now seen together with the production of Maryland culture, black and white, that archaeology finds. http://www.wyehousearchaeology.org/ Mark Leone, Benjamin Skolnik, and Elizabeth Pruitt’s research on African American religious artifacts, and new exhibit at Hornbake Library was discussed in the New York Times article entitled "Ezekiel’s Wheel Ties African Spiritual Traditions to Christianity.” Barbara Little and Paul Shackel participated in an Invited Workshop titled “Exploring the Power of Place for Heritage-based Peacebuilding” at the Center for Heritage and Museum Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.

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Barbara Little and Paul Shackel participated in an Invited Workshop titled “Exploring the Power of Place for Heritage-based Peacebuilding” at the Center for Heritage and Museum Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. Marilyn London will be teaching the summer program Austria: Forensic Aviation Archaeology: Recovery of a WWII Aircraft Crash Site in 2017. This program is part of a Strategic Partnership with the Defense POW-MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA). The archaeological field school will survey and investigate an aircraft crash site from World War II. The mission is to identify the aircraft and recover the remains of the military missing-in-action (MIA) flight crew member(s). The DPAA will identify the remains and repatriate them to their families. The site chosen for 2017 is in the eastern Alps in Austria. Adam Fracchia, PhD graduate, will also serve as a faculty in this program, and faculty from the University of Vienna will also participate. Linda Rabben gave presentations about her new book, Sanctuary and Asylum: A Social and Political History, at Annapolis Bookstore; Barnes & Noble/Catholic University; Center for Global Migration Studies, UMD; Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Silver Spring, MD; Center for Migration Studies, NY; Community College of Philadelphia; Highland Park (NJ) Reformed Church; St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, Seattle; Seattle University; Sojourners’ Retreat, Riverside Church, NY; Temple University; University of Washington; and Washington State Office of Refugee and Immigrant Assistance, among others. The book’s publication was subsidized by the Capell Family Endowed Book Fund.

Thurka Sangaramoorthy participated in the American Anthropological Association workshop on Digital Data Management Project in May. The AAA digital data resources workshop developed a set of online teaching modules, Bringing Digital Data Management Training into Methods Courses for Anthropology. The workshop and teaching modules were discussed in the September/October 2016 issue of Anthropology News, “AAA Launches Digital Data Management Resources.” http://www.anthropologynews.org/index.php/2016/09/30/aaa-launchesdigital-data-management-resources/ Thurka Sangaramoorthy and Emilia Guevara’s research was featured in a UMD Right Now article, “UMD Researchers Examine Health Care Access for Booming Immigrant Populations on Maryland's Eastern Shore” in May. http://www.umdrightnow.umd.edu/news/umdresearchers-examine-health-care-accessbooming-immigrant-populations-marylandseastern. Thurka Sangaramoorthy gave an invited lecture titled “HIV-stigma, Retention in Care, and Adherence” at the Division of Health Sciences, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, in August. Thurka Sangaramoorthy gave an invited lecture titled “Rapid Ethnographic Assessments: Adapting Anthropological Tools for Public Health Programs” in June at the Intersectional Qualitative Research Methods Institute for Underrepresented Minority Scholars, Center for Race, Gender, and Ethnicity, University of Maryland, College Park, MD.

Linda Rabben was quoted in a Christian Science Monitor article, “The New Face of the Sanctuary Movement: College Campuses,” in November.

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Paul Shackel gave an invited lecture titled “An Archaeology of Race and Memory in America’s Heartland” at the Center for Archaeological Research, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia in October. Paul Shackel gave an invited lecture titled “Remembering the Lattimer Massacre: Issues of Labor Justice in Northern Appalachia” at the Center for Heritage and Museum Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. Paul Shackel gave an invited lecture titled “Remembering the Lattimer Massacre: Issues of Labor Justice in Northern Appalachia” at the Australian Society for Historical Archaeology in Sydney, Australia.

Joe Watkins, “‘Get Them before They’re Gone’: From Collecting Cultural Objects to Collaborating with Communities.” Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology Race, Representation, and Museums Lecture Series, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Presentation celebrated the 150th anniversary of the Museum. Tony Whitehead convened in the UMCP’s Nyumburu’s Cultural Center for the 4th University- Community (U-C) Dialogues focused on the topic, Towards the Development of a Reentry Services Ecosystem (RSE) in October. Representatives from Washington, DC agencies and organizations providing services to prisoncommunity reentrants attended the event.

Paul Shackel gave an invited lecture titled “Race and the New Immigrant in Northern Appalachia” for the colloquium, Race: An Anthropological Interrogation, Department of Anthropology Colloquium Series 2016-2017, organized by Richard M. Leventhal and Deborah A. Thomas, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Emily Sheffield, Emilia Guevara, and Thurka Sangaramoorthy gave a presentation titled “Haitian Immigrants’ Experiences of Life and Health in Rural Maryland” at the BSOS Summer Research Initiative in July. Megan Springate was interviewed by the National Trust for Historic Preservation Preservation Leadership Forum about the forthcoming LGBTQ theme study in honor of the 2016 anniversary of the National Park Service (NPS). The interview was part of a series of blog posts highlighting the programs and history of NPS. http://forum.savingplaces.org/blogs/specialcontributor/2016/09/09/lgbtq-history-isamerican-history

Ana Ortez-Rivera with Dr. Christina Getrich at the McNair Scholars presentations in July. For her McNair Summer Research Internship, Ana worked on the "Health and Well-being of Newly 'DACA-mented' Immigrant Young Adults in Maryland" project.

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Publications Stephen Brighton and Andrew Webster completed a site report, "Archaeological Investigations on Windmill Hill, Skibbereen, County Cork", that details the results of the 2015 undergraduate field school in Skibbereen, Ireland. Janet Chernela​ wrote a chapter titled “Poor Me, I Have No Cousin: The Pragmatics of Marital Choice in the Northwest Amazon” for the book, Marriage Practices in Lowland South America. Janet Chernela and Laura Zanotti wrote a chapter titled “A Win-Win Scenario? The Prospects for Indigenous Peoples in Carbon Sequestration (REDD) Projects in Brazil” in the book, The Carbon Fix: Forest Carbon, Social Justice, and Environmental Governance. Sean Downey and Randy Haas published a study, “European Neolithic Societies Showed Early Warning Signals of Population Collapse” in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Carol Ellick published an article titled “A Cultural History of Archaeological Education” in the journal Advances in Archaeological Practice. Shirley Fiske co-edited a book titled The Carbon Fix: Forest Carbon, Social Justice, and Environmental Governance with Stephanie Paladino. Judith Freidenberg published "Trans-border Economic, Ecological and Health Processes: A Commentary to Part IV, in The US-Mexico Trans-border Region: Cultural Dynamics and Historical Interactions, University of New Mexico Press.

Frederick Douglass and Wye House: Archaeology and African American Culture in Maryland Exhibit at Hornbake Library

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Christina Getrich published an article titled “Viewing Focus Groups through a Critical Incident Lens” in the journal Qualitative Health Research.

Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman published an article with colleagues in the Journal of Community Archaeology and Heritage titled, “Linking Students to Latino Heritage Through Archaeology”.

Christina Getrich published an article titled “Low-Dose CT Lung Cancer Screening: Perspectives of High-Risk, SocioDemographically Diverse Patients in New Mexico” in the journal Preventing Chronic Disease.

Patrick Rivera’s article, "Freud's Speculations in Ethnology: A Reflection on Anthropology's Encounter with Psychoanalysis,” was accepted to the International Journal of Psychoanalysis in October.

Courtney Hofman and Torben Rick published "Millennial-Scale Sustainability of the Chesapeake Bay Native American Oyster Fishery" in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Courtney Hofman and Torben Rick published "Tracking the origins and diet of an endemic island canid (Urocyon littoralis) across 7300 years of human cultural and environmental change" in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews. Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels, with co-author Meritxell Ferrer, published the chapter “Women’s Ritual Practice in the Western Phoenician and Punic World,” in Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, edited by S. Budin and J. Turfa. Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels co-authored (with A. Markham, E. Osipova, and A. Caldas), the UNESCO/UNEP technical report World Heritage and Tourism in a Changing Climate (http://whc.unesco.org/document/139944). Jacqueline Messing with Refugio Nava Nava. 2016. “Language Acquisition, Shift, and Revitalization in Latin America and the Caribbean.” Chapter in Indigenous Language Revitalization in the Americas, edited by Teresa McCarty and Serafin Coronel-Molina. Routledge Press.

Thurka Sangaramoorthy published a commentary/analysis article titled “Black Lives Matter and Reflections from a Civil War” in Sapiens. Thurka Sangaramoorthy published a commentary/analysis article for Medium titled “The Devil Wears J. Crew: Exploring the Trauma of Forced Assimilation” in October. https://medium.com/@thurkasangaramoorthy/th e-devil-wears-j-crew-exploring-the-trauma-offorced-assimilation-d6d90e356d6d#.vavnbxubl Paul Shackel and Camille Westmont published “When the Mines Closed: Heritage Building in Northeastern Pennsylvania” in the journal General Anthropology. Megan Springate edited and wrote selected chapters of LGBTQ America: A Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Theme Study published by the National Park Service and the National Park Foundation. The volume was released in October and is available online at https://www.nps.gov/subjects/tellingallamericans stories/lgbtqthemestudy.htm Joe Watkins co-edited a book with Les Field and Cristóbal Gnecco titled Challenging the Dichotomy: The Licit and Illicit in Archaeological and Heritage Discourses, and wrote a chapter in it, “Looting the Oklahoma Past: Relationships and “Relation Shifting.”

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Conferences and Presentations Lorin Brace presented a paper titled, “JazzArchaeology and Neighborhood at the Blue Bird Inn, Detroit” at the Midwest Historical Archaeology Conference (MHAC) in Detroit, MI. Amber Cohen presented a paper titled "Fishing in Urban Waterways" at American University's Public Anthropology Conference. Amber Cohen presented a paper titled "Bernie Bros v the Media: Building the New Progressive Movement” at the Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association Conference in Atlantic City.

Emily Sheffield presenting her summer DRI poster. Emily worked with Thurka Sangaramoorthy and Emilia Guevara.

Sarah Grady presented a paper titled, “Engagement, Agency, and Activism through Environmental Archaeology” at the Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology (CNEHA) Conference in Ottawa, Canada in October. George Hambrecht presented papers at the EAA (European Anthropological Association) conference in London and WAC (World Archaeology Congress) in Kyoto.

Fabio Correa at the Complex Systems Summer School

10 Thurka Sangaramoorthy at the American Anthropological Association’s Digital Data Management Project workshop

z

Faculty and students involved in the UMD-UT project. (From left to right, back row: Jan Ahlrichs [UT], Barret Wessel [UMD], Heribert Beckmann [UT], Kevin Gibbons [UMD], Dr. Bruce James [UMD], Jessica Henkner [UT], Dr. Peter Kühn [UT], Priv.-Doz. Dr. Thomas Knopf [UT]; front row: Sara Mack [UMD], Sandra Teuber [UT], Adriane Michaelis [UMD], Dr. Sean Downey [UMD]; Not pictured: Prof. Dr. Thomas Scholten [UT])

Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels organized the conference session “‘The Oldest Human Heritage’: Biodiversity and Cultural Heritage” for the conference Anthropology, Weather, and Climate Change of the Royal Anthropological Institute, held in London, UK. In the session she also presented a paper titled “Mobilizing Biodiversity in World Heritage Cultural Landscapes for Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation.” Kathryn Lafrenz Samuels organized the conference session “Critical Heritage Theory: Foundational Cores and Innovative Edges” for the third biannual conference of the Association of Critical Heritage Studies in Montreal, Canada. In the session she also presented a paper titled “Ethnoheritage: Heritage Theory from the American Anthropological Perspective.” Ana Ortez-Rivera, an undergraduate anthropology major, presented her McNair Summer Research Internship this summer. Her project, which was supervised by Christina Getrich, was focused on the “Health and Wellbeing of Newly 'DACA-mented' Immigrant Young Adults in Maryland.”

Barnet Pavao-Zuckerman co-authored a talk for the 73rd annual Southeastern Archaeological Conference in Athens, GA titled, “What is this Bird? The Quest to Identify Parrot Remains from the Heyward-Washington House, Charleston, South Carolina”. The paper presented the results of research on a handful of parrot remains recovered from an 18th century high-status home in Charleston, SC. Its presence reflects the important role that Charleston played as a major maritime trading hub. Thurka Sangaramoorthy and colleagues presented a poster titled “Examining the Relationship between Natural Gas Compressor Stations and Residential Noise in West Virginia, USA” at the International Society of Exposure Science Annual Meeting, Utrecht, The Netherlands, in October. Camille Westmont presented a paper in a NCPE-sponsored session about future directions in historic preservation at the National Trust for Historic Preservation Conference in Houston, Texas.

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UMD Anthropology Attendance at the AAA Annual Meeting Bailey, Megan Presenter Session: Sign O the Times: Anthropological Methods, Inquiry, and Evidence Presentation Title: More Than a Feeling: Affect and Emotion in the Archaeological Record Bolles, Augusta Lynn Presenter Session: Re-framing Academic Success: Writing Against Achievement as an Individual Narrative Presentation Title: “You Just Don’t Know What I Went through” Sharing Experiences in the Academy Chair and Discussant Session: Discovering Black Middle Class Women’s Work in the Neoliberal U.S. Economy Presentation Title: Raising the Race: Black Career Women Redefine Marriage, Motherhood, and Community Carattini, Amy Presenter Session: Citizenship Practices and Cultures of Emigration: Discovering the Nation-State From Abroad Presentation Title: “You Are an Immigrant?” Perceptions of a US Middle-Class from Latin America Chernela, Janet Presenter Session: Language in the Amerindian Imagination (Part 1) Presentation Title: “Signs of Life": Traversing Worlds in Tukanoan (Kotiria) Narrative

Crain, Cathleen Organizer Session: Bridges to Professional Careers: Growing Support Within the AAA Organizer Session: 11th Annual NAPA/AAA Careers Expo: Exploring Professional Careers Downey, Sean Session Organizer, Chair, and Presenter Session: Emergent Landscapes, Disturbance Ecology, and New Approaches in Ecological Anthropology Presentation Title: Q'eqchi' Maya Milpa Agriculture: A Complex Swidden Management System in the Toledo District, Belize Ellick, Carol Participant Session: 11th Annual NAPA/AAA Careers Expo: Exploring Professional Careers Fiske, Shirley Chair Session: Evaluating the Evidence for Climate Justice: Carbon Offsets, Forest Governance, and the Aftermath of COP-21 Discussant Session: Climate Research in Latin America: Responding to the AAA Global Climate Change Task Force Report Freidenberg, Judith Chair Session: Citizenship Practices and Cultures of Emigration: Discovering the Nation-State From Abroad 12

Getrich, Christina Presenter Session: Embodied Evidence: Latino/a migrants and everyday (Extra)ordinary Violence Presentation Title: Embodied Insecurities in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands: The Enduring Effects of U.S. Immigration Policies and Enforcement Practices on Second-Generation Mexicans Heurtin-Roberts, Suzanne Presenter Session: Public Policy Summit Organizer, Chair, and Presenter Session: A Beginner’s Guide to the NIH: An Introduction For New and Early Career Anthropological Researchers Participant Session: 11th Annual NAPA/AAA Careers Expo: Exploring Professional Careers Lopez, Andrea Session Organizer, Chair, and Presenter Session: The Legacy of the So-Called Suffering Slot in Anthropology: Contestation and Reconfiguration Presentation Title: Life Space/Death Space: Tensions in the Ontological Landscapes of Suffering Discussant Session: At the Intersections of Anthropological and Medical Sciences: Possibilities and Risks of Interdisciplinary Collaborations

Sangaramoorthy, Thurka Presenter Session: Evidence and the Ends of AIDS: Science Discourse, and Politics at the End of the Treatment Scale-Up Era Presentation Title: Temporality and Positive Living in the Age of HIV/AIDS Tashima, Niel Committee Member Session: 11th Annual NAPA/AAA Careers Expo: Exploring Professional Careers Trombley, Jeremy Presenter Session: 4-Dimensional Landscape Models: Thinking and Modeling Environments Across Time Presentation Title: The Model and the Territory: The Chesapeake Bay Model and the Making of a Watershed Watkins, Joe Presenter Session: The Destruction of Cultural Heritage in Warfare Presenter Session: Anthropology’s Many Conversations: A Dialogue With Contributors to the New Routledge Companion to Contemporary Anthropology Department of Anthropology University of Maryland 1111 Woods Hall, 4302 Chapel Lane College Park, MD 20742 (301)-405-1423 anth.umd.edu

Happy Holidays! 13

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