• Featured Graduate Student, Kehli Henry

    Kehli Henry pictureKehli Henry, PhD candidate, developed an interest in anthropology early on, deciding to pursue it as her major at Central Michigan University. The nuance of anthropological theory, as well as the attention to cultural factors gave her an appreciation for the complexity within the field. Her previous work with an American Indian tribe allowed her to see the utility of anthropological theory in the issues she dealt with. MSU provided the perfect fit for her graduate studies because of the faculty, and the focus on both medical anthropology and applied work.

    Since her undergraduate work, Kehli has been deeply concerned with using an applied and community-based approach to better understand education, drug and alcohol use in American Indian communities, American Indian data sovereignty and data protection, as well as criminal justice and historical trauma. Her dissertation research encompasses many of these topics focusing upon a Midwest American Indian community to document and understand the ways in which the discussions surrounding the “War on Drugs” represent drug and alcohol users, how these representations affect the lives of individual American Indian drug users, and how they affect their community.

    While at MSU, Ms. Henry received a University Enrichment Fellowship, giving her the resources to focus on her academic work and research. She also received the Susan Applegate Krouse Graduate Student Fellowship in 2016/17, and a Wenner Gren Dissertation Fieldwork Grant, allowing her to quickly move onto the data analysis phase of her dissertation. Kehli hopes to graduate in the Spring of 2019.
    Ms. Henry hopes to offer very applied and practical research, evaluation, and information to the communities she works with, aligning her research with their wants and needs and contributing to the conversation around responsible conduct of research for both partners and participants. She wants to get at the underlying issues surrounding drug and alcohol use and treatment in American Indian communities, to provide information useful to tribal communities in making decisions and to contribute to the de-stigmatization of drugs and drug users for a more equitable approach to policy and treatment.

    Kehli reports that many teachers and mentors, both inside and outside of the academic world, have contributed to her success. Her husband, parents and grandparents have always been hugely supportive and influential in her approaches to complex issues. Kehli has also been fortunate that she has had the opportunity to learn from many tribal community members and elders. Her undergraduate advisor at CMU, Dr. Athena McLean had a huge influence in developing her anthropological thinking. Her dissertation committee at MSU has also been very supportive and influential. Dr. Heather Howard, chair of her committee; Dr. Mindy Morgan; Dr. John Norder and Dr. Django Paris have all helped Kehli to improve the ways in which she engages, interacts with, and holds herself accountable to the communities she works with. In addition, the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program (AIISP) and Indigenous Graduate Student Collective (IGSC) have both offered a multitude of opportunities allowing her to grow and learn with other scholars concerned with Indigenous issues and communities.

    Kehli gets the most enjoyment out of interacting with American Indian nations/communities in ways that are both useful for them and can inform and develop her own perspectives and understandings. She plans to work directly for American Indian tribes and stay engaged with anthropological scholars and professional organizations after graduation. Outside of her academic research, Kehli is passionate about animals (especially dogs), the performing arts, Major League Soccer, and reading science fiction & fantasy for fun.

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  • Undergraduate Research Symposium and Showcase

    photo of msu anthropology undergraduate research symposium
    2017 Department of Anthropology Undergraduate Research Symposium

    The Department of Anthropology held its First Annual Anthropology Research Symposium and Showcase for Undergraduate Students on Thursday, December 7th from 6:30 – 8:30 pm. The idea for this symposium blossomed out of conversations between Dr. Fredy Rodriquez and the department chair, Dr. Jodie O’Gorman, about the need to create an open house for our undergraduate students to show off their hard work and excite other students about research. The two quickly agreed that a research symposium and showcase would be the most beneficial for students as a supportive audience of peers, friends, parents and faculty would provide an opportunity for exchange and feedback. Many of the participants then turned their presentations into entries in the larger University Undergraduate Research and Arts Forum.

    undergraduate explains his research poster to an onlooker
    Mike Gates explains his research, “Lithic Analysis of the Perrin Mink Farm Site.”

    The Anthropology Research Symposium and Showcase offers an opportunity for parents, friends and others to learn more about our undergraduate students’ independent work and collaboration with faculty and graduate students around the university. All anthropology majors, minors and those who had collaborated on anthropological research initiatives with faculty members or independently were invited to participate. The student research projects were displayed in recorded Power Point and poster presentation formats. Dr. Rodriguez and other faculty members mentored students who had never had the occasion to share their research prior to the event. Twenty projects in all were showcased at the 2017 Symposium with research topics ranging from medical anthropology, archaeology, forensic anthropology, sociocultural anthropology, and social media anthropology. Light snacks and coffee were provided, and we are happy to announce that we received close to 120 attendees.

    undergraduate stands by her research poster
    Amy Hair presents her photogrammetry work, “Craniometric Analysis Using 3D Modeling.”

     

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  • Alumnae Dr. Mary Ann Ladia to visit March 28 and 29

    photo of Mary Ann Ladia, PhD
    Dr. Mary Ann J. Ladia

    Mary Ann J. Ladia, PhD currently serves as University Researcher III of the Institute of Clinical Epidemiology at the National Institutes of Health and Faculty of the Department of Clinical Epidemiology of the College of Medicine at the University of the Philippines Manila. Dr. Ladia received her PhD from the Department of Anthropology in 2008 under the guidance of Drs. Judy Pugh and Linda Hunt, as adviser and committee member, respectively.

    On March 28th, she will be speaking to Dr. Heather Howard’s Anthropology 370 course, Culture, Health, and Illness. Dr. Ladia will be presenting her paper entitled “Clinical ramifications of TB stigma in Baguio City, Philippines.” This event is open to interested undergraduates from 12:40 – 2 pm in C100 Wonders Hall. You can hear Dr. Ladia discuss her paper below.

     

    On March 29th, Dr. Mary Ann J. Ladia will be presenting her talk “TB Patient Care Pathway and Stigma” at noon in Baker Hall 155. This event is open to the public.

    Using surveys, ethnography, and secondary data, this presentation highlights the Philippine national tuberculosis (TB) program from the establishment of sanitoria at the end of 19th and early 20th centuries to the present. The age-old understanding of the disease transmission continues to play a major role in the patient care pathway despite the discovery of scientific methods of TB control. Due to stigmatized health condition, Filipinos affected by TB shift care from public to private clinics and move away from their hometown to seek care.

    This visit is sponsored by the Department of Anthropology of the College of Social Science, Michigan State University.

     

  • Congratulations Dr. Fayana Richards!

    The Department of Anthropology would like to congratulate our newest PhD. Dr. Fayana Richards!

    Dr. Fayana RichardsWe are very excited to see Fayana come to the completion of her graduate career here at MSU after the successful defense of her dissertation on November 21 and we wish her and her family all the best as she moves forward with her professional career.

    Fayana’s research recognizes the role of older African American women in providing care for their own grandchildren, nieces, nephews and even non-kin, crediting historical and structural factors that have shaped observed forms of African American kinship and caregiving patterns. Her dissertation explores African American grandmothers’ motivations for providing care and their associated caregiving practices. In identifying their motivations to care, her research focuses on how relatedness is constituted, as a form of sociality, between grandparents and kin, as well as between non-kin. Questions such as; How are ties of caregiving responsibility created and maintained among grandmothers caring for their grandchildren? How are perceptions of the good life and wellbeing related to transmitting values to their grandchildren? were examined.

  • MSU alumna discusses volunteer tourism

    Dr. Andrea Freidus recently published a piece in The Conversation, an online not-for-profit media outlet. Her piece entitled “Volunteer tourism: what’s wrong with it and how can it be changed,” came out on November 8th.

    Here is a small excerpt from her piece: “Volunteer tourism, or voluntourism, is an emerging trend of travel linked to “doing good”. Yet these efforts to help people and the environment have come under heavy criticism – I believe for good reason.

    Voluntourists’ ability to change systems, alleviate poverty or provide support for vulnerable children is limited. They simply don’t have the skills. And they can inadvertently perpetuate patronising and unhelpful ideas about the places they visit.” To read the full article, click here.

    Dr. Andrea Freidus received her PhD. from the Department of Anthropology at MSU in 2011 entitled “Raising Malawi’s Children: AIDS Orphans and a Politics of Compassion” under the guidance of her chair, Dr. Anne Ferguson. Currently, Dr. Freidus is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at University of North Carolina, Charlotte. She specializes in applied and medical anthropology. She also has an Masters of Public Health in global public health. She has worked in Latin America, Africa, and South Florida. Her research has looked at the rise of grassroots transnational organizations targeting aid to orphans in Malawi, southern Africa. She explores the emerging global connections among volunteers, donors, development workers, program organizers and the directors associated with these organizations and the children they serve.