• Dr. Ethan Watrall Receives DEADDA Grant

    The Department of Anthropology is pleased to announce that Assistant Professor Ethan Watrall is part of a team recently awarded a European Cooperation of Science & Technology grant for the Saving European Archaeology from the Digital Dark Age (SEADDA) Project. The project is based on the premise that making archaeological data open and freely accessible is a priority across Europe because the digital realm lacks appropriate, persistent repositories. The result is that, due to the fragility of digital data and non-repeatable nature of most archaeological research, we are poised to lose a generation of research to a “digital dark age.”  Mitigating this crisis will bring archaeologists and data management specialists together to share expertise and create resources allowing them to address problems in the most appropriate way within their own countries. While important international standards exist, there is no single way to build a repository. To be successful, archaeologists must be at the decision-making heart of how their data is archived to ensure re-use is possible.

    The SEADDA Project, based at the University of York (UK) and made up of scholars from 26 countries, will address these challenges by establishing a priority research area in the archiving, dissemination, and open access re-use of archaeological data. It brings together an interdisciplinary network of archaeologists and computer scientists; experts in archaeological data management and open data dissemination and re-use. The project will create publications and materials, setting state of the art standards for archaeological archiving across Europe. The project will also organize meetings and training, allowing archaeologists from countries with archiving expertise to work with archaeologists with few or no available options, so they may share knowledge and create dialogue within their countries and move forward to address the crisis.


    To read the full newsletter, click here.

  • Marcela Omans Awarded NSF

    Marcela Omans Awarded NSF

    Marcella OmansCongratulations to Marcela Omans for her NSF Graduate Research Fellowship she received for her project entitled “La Mesa Barrio Chino, Tijuana, Mexico: China’s Gateway to Latin America.”

    Her work focuses on providing insight into how newly arrived Chinese immigrants and business people leverage preexisting Chinese networks to gain economic footholds in Latin America; and on revealing how perceived Chinese identity in Latin America and the mediation of the expectations associated with this have shaped the Sino-Latin American narrative. In recent decades, Chinese corporations, communities, and individuals have increasingly looked beyond national borders for new economic opportunities. This shift was heralded by China’s joining the World Trade Organization (2001) and implementation of policies which encourage and incentivize overseas investment and migration. Scholars across many disciplines are beginning to study this increase in transnational activities by Chinese entities, including Chinese exchanges with Latin America. Although Latin American connections with China date back to the 1800s, this recent era of engagement is by far the most robust. Currently, much of the Sino-Latin American literature is focused on macro-level global processes such as trade, flow of Foreign Direct Investment, diplomacy implications, and the greater South-South cooperation narrative. However, we must recognize the role that local ethnic Chinese networks in Latin America play in shaping these activities and their overall success and visibility (DeHart, 2015). To date, research looking at these more localized, transnational Sino-Latin American relationships has been limited.

    Through her NSF funding, she plans to conduct multilingual (Spanish and Mandarin Chinese) ethnographic fieldwork in La Mesa Barrio Chino, Tijuana, Mexico to provide an example of the growing Sino-Latin American relationship in a local context. La Mesa Barrio Chino currently has an estimated Chinese population of 15,000 people which has more than tripled since 2009. These communities include a pastiche of new and old immigrant communities as well as the local Mexican community. Located in northern Mexico, this community is strategically placed on the border with the United States and near the many factories that span the Mexican countryside. Subsequent to the establishment of a direct flight route from Shanghai to Tijuana in 2008, this site has become a gateway for both newly arrived individual immigrants and wealthy Chinese business people. Thus, it presents a good case study of this wave of Sino-Latin American engagement and the effects it will have on investment and development in the region. The success of newly arrived migrants and business people is not only contingent on their own social fields but also on the urban planning and economic development policies implemented by the local, regional and national government. Her research will be divided into a summer of preliminary pilot fieldwork followed by a full year of fieldwork.

    Marcela’s work will help inform those who are concerned with the growing relationship between China and Mexico and its potential impacts on the community and region. This includes scholars and policymakers concerned with trade, urban planning and development, urban diversity and attracting foreign investment.

    We wish Ms. Omans safe travels as she begins her dissertation research.

  • Fieldwork Photography Contest Winners 2018

    Fieldwork Photography Contest Winners 2018

    We would like to thank everyone who entered. The photos were amazing as always.

     

    1st Place

    Fishing Inle Lake; Myanmar, 2017

    Edward Glayzer; Graduate Student

    a man fishing in Inle Lake, Myanmar
    Fishing Inle Lake

    2nd Place

    A Parade in Began; Myanmar, 2017

    Edward Glayzer; Graduate Student

    A colorful parade in Began, Myanmar
    A Parade in Began

     

    3rd Place

    Reading Aloud in Fon; Benin, 2018

    Marcy O’Neil; Faculty

    A girl reading aloud in Fon, Benin
    Reading Aloud in Fon

     

    Congratulations to all of our winners!

     

    Click here to read the 2018 Spring newsletter.