FABLE Talk: Dr. Susan Dewey, Criminology & Criminal Justice, UA
109 ten Hoor 350 Marrs Spring Rd, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTitle: "The Power of Photo-Ethnography as Method: Examples from Community-Based Research Projects with Women in the Sex Industry and Women in Prison"
FABLE Talk: Patricia Mathu, Matthew Pappalardo, Kylie Overton, Benjamin Trost
109 ten Hoor 350 Marrs Spring Rd, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTalk Title: "Food Security at UA: What We Know, What We Don't Know, and What You Should Know"
“Getting from the Pleistocene to the Present in the American Southeast: What Is and What Still Could Be,” a talk by Dr. Shane Miller, Mississippi State University
253 ten HoorAbstract: Archaeology in North America is an inherently odd discipline where most of the research into the Native past has been conducted by white, western researchers focused on a fairly
FABLE Talk: Dr. Deepa Das Acevedo, UA School of Law
109 ten Hoor 350 Marrs Spring Rd, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesTalk Title: "The Battle for Sabarimala: Religion, Law, and Gender in Contemporary India"
ECHO CoLab: Language of Guns/Gun Control Activism
Rowand Johnson room 31 348 Stadium Drive, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesThis week at ECHO, we will be holding a research design/brainstorming meeting focusing on MA student Gillian Faircloth’s potential plans for conducting thesis research on language, embodiment, and the language
FABLE talk: “Inking of Immunity: Using Tattooing to Explore Human Nature”
103 ten Hoor 19 ten Hoor Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesOur Department of Anthropology talk in the For Anthropologists Beginning Lifelong Engagements (FABLE) series features Dr. Chris Lynn. Dr. Lynn will be speaking on the "Inking of Immunity: Using Tattooing to Explore Human Nature" this Friday, September 8,
“Less Stigma, More Water: Unsung Pathways to Global Health,” guest lecture by Prof. Alexandra Brewis
30 ten Hoor 350 Marrs Spring Rd, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesThe James R. Bindon Endowed Lecture in Biocultural Anthropology and Health will be delivered by Dr. Alexandra Brewis of Arizona State University, on "Less Stigma, More Water: Unsung Pathways to