• Fall 2015 Message from the Chair: Dr. Jodie O’Gorman

    In August I returned from a year of sabbatical and leave, and although I thoroughly enjoyed being immersed in my research for an extended period of time, I missed our students and working with the faculty and staff. I am glad to be back. At our August retreat I took the faculty on a tour […]

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  • LEADR Completes a Successful First Year

    This fall marks the one-year anniversary of LEADR (the Lab for the Education and Advancement in Digital Research), a new joint initiative led by History in collaboration with Anthropology and MATRIX Center for Digital Humanities and Social Sciences. LEADR functions as an interdisciplinary classroom, digital resource library, and a pedagogical and methodological support center located […]

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  • Julie Fleischman and Sabrina Perlman Awarded Fulbright IIE Grants

    Julie Fleischman and Sabrina Perlman have been awarded Fulbright IIE U.S. Student Program research grants. Recipients of Fulbright grants are selected on the basis of academic and professional achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential. Julie will conduct her dissertation research on Khmer Rouge regime violence by analyzing skeletal trauma and memorialization in Cambodia. Sabrina will […]

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  • Dr. Fenton and Dr. Hefner Selected for National Standards Committee

    The Department of Anthropology is honored to announce that Dr. Todd Fenton and Dr. Joseph Hefner have been selected as inaugural members of the Organization of Scientific Area Committees (OSAC) Subcommittee on Anthropology. This is part of the larger organization, National Institute of Justice and National Institute on Standards and Technology, made up of more […]

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  • TLE Award Allows Purchase of XRF Instrument

    With increasing archaeological applications of natural and physical scientific technology, there is an increased need to train students in their principles, application, interpretation and reporting. By doing this, students are able to compete successfully in a changing employment landscape. Working in tandem with Prof Tyrone Rooney (Geological Sciences), William Lovis and Rooney were awarded a […]

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  • Spring 2015 Newsletter

    The Department of Anthropology is proud to present the newest edition of the biannual newsletter. Our Spring 2015 issue features these articles: Spring 2015 Message from the Acting Chair: Dr. Laurie Medina Dr. Fenton and Dr. Hefner Selected for National Standards Committee TLE Award Allows Purchase of XRF Instrument Featured Faculty Member: Dr. Andrea Louie […]

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  • Indigenous Graduate Student Collective: e-maamawizijig giizhiikamoowaad akinoowamaadiwinan

    In November 2012, Anthropology PhD students including Adam Haviland, Marie Schaefer, Kehli Henry, Nikki Silva, and Mike Cavanaugh, and law students from the Indigenous Law Program, including Sarah Donnelly, Nellie David and John Simermeyer, started a new graduate student organization at MSU for American Indian/indigenous students and other students interested in indigenous issues and scholarship. […]

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  • Environmental Archaeology Research Partnership

    In 1974 and 1975 Professor William Lovis performed the original archaeological survey for what would become Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore – one of Michigan’s premier tourist destinations. Lovis had an opportunity to return to Sleeping Bear during summer 2014 as part of an interdisciplinary, inter-departmental, inter-institutional partnership with the National Park Service to investigate […]

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  • Featured Adjunct: Dr. Jamil Hanifi

    Dr. M. Jamil Hanifi was born and raised in an urban Pashtun tribal social environment in preindustrial Afghanistan. He maintains native-level competence in Farsi and Pashtu- the two major languages of Afghanistan. He holds a BSc in police administration and MA in political science from Michigan State University. With innocent ambivalence and a novice academic […]

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  • Alumna Dr. Julie Pelletier: Working with Indigenous Communities

    Dr. Julie Pelletier’s planned to specialize in medical anthropology when she arrived at MSU. However, her academic career took a different direction when she was awarded doctoral research funding by the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians to conduct a project on indigenous identity. She completed the PhD program in 2002, after being hired […]

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