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San Jose: American Anthropologists Stand Up Against Torture and the Occupation of Iraq

In San Jose, the members of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) approved resolutions condemning the occupation of Iraq and the use of torture. The events of Saturday’s meeting do represent a “noteworthy democratic moment in the history of American anthropology and in higher academia’s struggle to retain some control over the knowledge it produces”, anthropologist David Price writes in The Counterpunch:

The first resolution condemns the American occupation of Iraq; calls for an immediate withdrawal of troops, the payment of reparations, and it asks that all individuals committing war crimes against Iraqis be prosecuted. This statement passed with little debate or dissent.

The second resolution condemns not only the use of torture by the Bush administration, but it denounces the use of anthropological knowledge in torture and extreme interrogations.

The AAA’s statement stands in stark contrast with the American Psychological Association’s ambivalent policies which provides psychologists working in military and intelligence settings with some cover should they wish to assist in extreme interrogations or torture.

One of the concerns underlying this resolution comes from reports by Seymour Hersh that CIA interrogators consulted anthropological works such as Raphael Patai’s book, The Arab Mind, to better design culture-specific means of torture and interrogation. This resolution passed unanimously with little debate.

The resolutions were co-written by Roberto González, an associate professor of anthropology at San Jose State University, and Kanhong Lin, a graduate student in anthropology at American University.

>> read the whole story in the Counterpunch

UPDATE 2 (11.12.06

Press Release: Anthropologists weigh in on Iraq, torture at annual meeting (pdf)

UPDATE:

Savage Minds: Discussion about AAA democracy

SEE ALSO:

First news from the AAA-conference?

“War on terror”: CIA sponsers anthropologists to gather sensitive information

Bush, “war of terror” and the erosion of free academic speech: Challenges for anthropology

Anthropology and Counterinsurgency: The Strange Story of Their Curious Relations

In San Jose, the members of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) approved resolutions condemning the occupation of Iraq and the use of torture. The events of Saturday's meeting do represent a "noteworthy democratic moment in the history of American anthropology…

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(updated) First news from the AAA-conference?

At the moment, the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) is taking place in San Jose. The AAA has done some work with its homepage and written some (really useful) press releases that serve as a guide for journalists. I haven’t discovered news from the conference yet, though.

The first blog post – live from the conference – was written by Jen Cardew at Synthesis of Thoughts. In Cardew’s opinion, “the vibe of the AAA conference” is different from other conferences and he “really was very put off by it”:

I’m not sure what exactly it is, but the people don’t seem to be as friendly, people really don’t like you in the eyes but at your name badge and there is a slight air of overall stuffiness. I’ve never felt like that at the SFAA. I’m hoping that this was just an “off day” and the rest of the week is different, because I usually thoroughly enjoy conferences.

Jen Cardew also tells us about a new initiative – the blog http://studentanthro.blogspot.com/ – it is part of the session “At A Critical Intersection: Exploring the Expectations and Needs of Anthropology Students in 2006” (not yet much activity there, though)

Another anthroblogger – a new discovery – “Nani” on her blog Everyday Anthropology – comments on a panel where Native Indians and archaeologists talked past each other. It’s her first conference ( “Everyone wore a badge (except me) and had in their hand the novel-length AAA Meeting program.”)

Nani is writing a thesis on the issue of repatriation and reburial of Native American human remains and cultural items.

In her second blog post she tells us about why anthropology is relevant to her. Anthropology gives answers to personal questions:

It was the only field that could answer my personal questions: Why did my Chinese-Indonesian relatives and friends see and treat me differently because of my dark(er) skin? Why were GUESS, Esprit, and other American brands so popular in my high school in Bandung, West Java? Why do I feel neither “feminine” nor “masculine”, like the oppositional way society defines the two? Why don’t Native Indonesians and Chinese-Indonesians get along? What is evolution, and how are we the same as and different both within our own species and from other species? etc.

>> visit Everyday Anthropology

I suppose there will be more news from anthropology bloggers at the conference, among others we can expect news about the Open Access activities by the Savage Minds bloggers

UPDATES

In San Jose, the members of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) approved resolutions condemning the occupation of Iraq and the use of torture

Elizabeth (Dori) Tunstall , Associate Professor of Design Anthropology at University of Illinois at Chicago, writes that she prefers workshops to presentations:

The two workshops I facilitated were interesting because they were very interactive. Using a lot of Post-it notes to get participants to brain storm about the brand attributes of anthropology and opportunities to craft audience appropriate messages.

Someone said to her: “You can’t be an anthropologist. Your presentation looks too good.”

SEE ALSO:

This is conference blogging!

Anthropology and the World: What has happened at the EASA conference?

Conference blogging at the conference of the Society for Applied Anthropology: “Quit using the word ‘culture’ wherever possible”

AAA Annual Meeting: Are blogs a better news source than corporate media?

What’s the point of anthropology conferences?

How To Present A Paper – or Can Anthropologists Talk?

At the moment, the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) is taking place in San Jose. The AAA has done some work with its homepage and written some (really useful) press releases that serve as a guide…

Read more

Already 76 signatures for more Open Access Anthropology

“We need a solid open access policy to make anthropological research widely available.” “We need a form of financial sustainability that does not compromise our ability to disseminate our research.” 76 people have already signed the Open Access Anthropology Letter, written by the anthropology bloggers at Savage Minds. The letter is one of the initiatives to promote Open Access Anthropology at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association.

>> more at Savage Minds: Please sign the Open Access Anthropology Letter

PS: Sorry for irregular posting. Too much to do at the moment

SEE ALSO:

New Open Access Anthropology Website, mailinglist, chat and t-shirts!

Open Access Anthropology – antropologi.info’s special

"We need a solid open access policy to make anthropological research widely available." "We need a form of financial sustainability that does not compromise our ability to disseminate our research." 76 people have already signed the Open Access Anthropology Letter,…

Read more

New Open Access Anthropology Website, mailinglist, chat and t-shirts!

Great new initiatives: Kerim Friedman has set up a wiki to promote free access to anthropology journal articles and papers – Open Access Anthropology. It is located at http://openaccessanthropology.org/ This wiki explains: What is open access? Why should anthropologists care about open access? Why does the American Anthropological Association oppose open access?What can we do to promote open access anthropology?

He has also created a discussion list for Open Access issues. It on Google Groups which means one can read it on the web, via RSS, or you can sign up to get it via e-mail. “Please help spread the word!”, hew writes:
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/open-access-anthropology

At Savage Minds there are several new posts on Open Access:

Open Access Your Diss

Who’s down with OAA?

Open Access in San Jose (AAA annual meeting)

UPDATES:

New Open Access Anthropology Blog

Savage Minds: Please sign the Open Access Anthropology Letter

At Savage Minds: AAA Open Access T-shirts

Savage Minds: Open Access Anthropology: what you can do

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Open Access: “The American Anthropological Association reminds me of the recording industry”

American Anthropological Association opposes Open Access to Journal Articles

Kerim Friedman: Open Source Anthropology

Open Access Anthropology – antropologi.info’s special

Great new initiatives: Kerim Friedman has set up a wiki to promote free access to anthropology journal articles and papers - Open Access Anthropology. It is located at http://openaccessanthropology.org/ This wiki explains: What is open access? Why should anthropologists care…

Read more

Protests at Yale: When Walmart’s management principles run an anthropology department

Generally, anthropologists support social justice, but in their own department, they fire colleagues like David Graeber who publicly supported graduate students’ right to form a union. “In increasingly corporate universities, the gap between one’s scholarship and one’s university politics is increasing”, Nazima Kadir writes in a commentary in Anthropology News November (not online, for AAA-members access via AnthroSource).

Kadir is PhD candidate at Yale’s anthropology department and an organizer for GESO, the graduate employees and students’ union.

The non-renewal of David Graeber’s contract, she writes, has received widespread attention as a sign of the conflict between ideology and engaged practice. But, she continues, it is rarely viewed in the context of union-busting. An avowed anarchist, Graeber publicly supported graduate students’ right to form a union. When the director of graduate studies attempted to expel an organizer, Graeber was the only faculty on her committee to defend her.

Weeks later, senior faculty voted against renewing Graeber’s contract, demonstrating with clarity the consequences for faculty who break ranks to support the union, Kadir writes.

More anti-union activities included another attempt to expel an organizer; the firing of David Graeber for defending this student; a series of aggressive emails sent by an anti-union faculty member to her; and the director of graduate students threatening to void the qualifying exams of several third-year students (all union activists).

Taken together, the administration and faculty’s actions constituted a pattern of systemic, organized abuse and created a fearful, anti-intellectual climate.

Following Yale’s lead, during the joint Yale/Columbia strike in 2005, Columbia’s provost (a noted labor historian) advised faculty to withhold grants and teaching fellowships from strikers. His memo was leaked and published in The Nation.

Background: In 2004, the Bush-appointed National Labor Review Board (NLRB ) reversed the Clinton-appointed board’s decision of 2000, which recognized graduate students’ right to organize at private universities. Current decisions “reflect the current administration’s anti-labor polices”. At public universities, it’s a non-issue, she clarifies: Berkeley and the University of Michigan have recognized their graduate student unions for decades.

For Union membership is a democratic right:

I’ve began organizing for the Graduate Employees and Students Organization when I realised the academy was in crisis. With 40% of all teaching being conducted by adjuncts, it is clear that the “casualization” of academic labor is not the future but the present. If I want to have job security, health benefits, gender equality and anything as banal as pregnancy leave, I have to fight for it as a graduate student before even considering having it as an adjunct.

I refuse to accept that Walmart’s management principles should also run a university setting. While Yale demonstrates another vision, I am encouraged by the efforts of the graduate students who organize to make the academy into a forum for democratic possibilities, and not corporate interests.

For those of you without access to Anthropology News, Nazima Kadir mentions most of her points in her paper The Challenges of Organizing Academic Labor (pdf)

The website of the graduate employees and students’ union is quite informative, see among others their reports.

SEE ALSO:

Fired from Yale, anarchist professor points to politics

Solidarity with David Graeber website

Bush, “war of terror” and the erosion of free academic speech: Challenges for anthropology

Blogging and Public Anthropology at Yale: When free speech costs a career

USA: Censorship threatens fieldwork – A call for resistance

Censorship of research in the USA: Iranians not allowed to publish papers

Generally, anthropologists support social justice, but in their own department, they fire colleagues like David Graeber who publicly supported graduate students' right to form a union. "In increasingly corporate universities, the gap between one's scholarship and one's university politics is…

Read more