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Katrina disaster has roots in 1700s / Earthquake disaster in South Asia man-made

As noted before, disasters have their cultural aspects: Disasters are embedded in cultural practices of societies. “Disasters do not just happen.”

Anthropologist Anthony Oliver-Smith says in an interview about the earthquake in South Asia:

People often believe that nearly all environmental disasters are natural disasters when in fact many are the result of human actions, such as unsustainable use of natural resources. Even in the case of the recent earthquake in Pakistan, the majority of the deaths and displaced people can be attributed to the failure of building structures and their location.

>> read more at World Business Council for Sustainable Development

A recent expert panel at Louisiana State University stated that the Katrina disaster actually has roots in 1700 when the French settlers started building levees in an attempt to stop flooding from the Mississippi River. Hurricane Katrina’s effects are the consequences of natural forces combined with the way people have engineered the landscape as far back as the early 1700s:

“It was not just a meteorological event, it was a social event as well,” said Craig Colten, professor of geography at LSU.

John Pine, interim chair of LSU’s department of geography and anthropology, said rebuilding will need to include recognizing how people have changed the landscape around New Orleans and how that could affect flooding and storm damage in the future. In doing that, he said, it’s important to include the unique culture and heritage of neighborhoods instead of imposing outside ideas on people.

Helen Regis, associate professor of anthropology, agreed.

“The people who live in New Orleans are the main experts on how to rebuild,” Regis said.

>> read more in The Advocate (Louisiana) (copy of article)

SEE ALSO

The Anthropology of Disaster – Anthropologists on Katrina

“Disasters do not just happen” – The Anthropology of Disaster (2)

New website: Understanding Katrina: Perspectives from the Social Sciences

Globalvoices: South Asian earthquake blogging highlights

South Asia Quake Help Blog

As noted before, disasters have their cultural aspects: Disasters are embedded in cultural practices of societies. "Disasters do not just happen."

Anthropologist Anthony Oliver-Smith says in an interview about the earthquake in South Asia:

People often believe that nearly all environmental…

Read more

Pacific Ethnography – Anthropology research consultancy on Human and Environmental Interaction

(Via my site statistics) Most anthropological research consultancies concentrate on design and business anthropology. Pacific Ethnography do conduct consumer product research, but they provide human environmental impact research as well and work with non-profit-organisations. One of their project is called “Understanding and Changing Polluting Behavior in Los Angeles”: They develop benchmarking tools to guide water quality education in Los Angeles County watersheds. They have offices both in San Pedro (California), in Santiago (Chile) and in Pondicherry (India).

>> visit Pacific Ethnography’s website

(Via my site statistics) Most anthropological research consultancies concentrate on design and business anthropology. Pacific Ethnography do conduct consumer product research, but they provide human environmental impact research as well and work with non-profit-organisations. One of their project is…

Read more

Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine – New Open Acces Journal with RSS feed

With so many debates going on about the future of anthropological publishing, it is good to know that things are happening. At least in neighboring fields. A few month ago, a new journal was launched: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine with papers on the relationships between human cultures and nature, Traditional Environmental/Ecological Knowledge (TEK), folk and traditional medical knowledge. Topics include also medical and visual anthropology. All articles are freely accesible, articles are distributed under the Creative Commons License.

The journal’s website has many useful features: RSS-feed for the most recent articles, Email article to a fried, you may even post comments

>> read the Editorial by Andrea Pieroni, Lisa Leimar Price and Ina Vandebroek

>> visit the Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine

SEE ALSO:
Alex Golub: Anthrosource — actually useful? AnthroSource could be a place people will want to come if it allows them to connect both to digital content and each other

With so many debates going on about the future of anthropological publishing, it is good to know that things are happening. At least in neighboring fields. A few month ago, a new journal was launched: Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine…

Read more

In wake of Graeber uproar, up to six anthropology professors may go

Just months after the Anthropology Department at Yale University voted not to renew sociocultural anthropology professor David Graeber’s contract based on his political views, rumors are swirling that the department may lose as many as six additional professors by the end of the academic year, Yale Daily News reports

SEE ALSO:

Solidarity with David Graeber-Webpage

Review of Graeber’s book: Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology / download the whole book

Just months after the Anthropology Department at Yale University voted not to renew sociocultural anthropology professor David Graeber's contract based on his political views, rumors are swirling that the department may lose as many as six additional professors by the…

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Why hasn’t anthropology changed the world? New book by Thomas Hylland Eriksen

A new book by Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo, might answer some of our questions on why our discipline has not gained the respect it in our view deserves.

According to some first reviews (the book will be published not before November 2005), Hylland Eriksen demonstrates that the fault is partly our own:

If anthropology matters as a key tool with which to understand modern society beyond the ivory towers of academia, why are so few anthropologists willing to come forward in times of national or global crisis? Eriksen argues that anthropology needs to rediscover the art of narrative and abandon arid analysis and, more provocatively, anthropologists need to lose their fear of plunging into the vexed issues modern societies present.

>> read more at Berg Publishers

SEE ALSO:
Thomas Hylland Eriksen’s homepage
antropologi.info – Interview with Hylland Eriksen on anthropology and internet

A new book by Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo, might answer some of our questions on why our discipline has not gained the respect it in our view deserves.

According to some first…

Read more