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Job Talk: CAPHIL Assistant Research Scientist

1/22/2017—3 pm—TBA—Katelyn Bolhofner Dr. Katelyn Bolhofner, the fourth candidate for the CAPHIL Research Assistant Scientist position, will be giving her talk, Telling their Stories: Advancing Skeletal Analysis and Interpretation in Forensic Anthropology, on Monday, January 22nd at 3 pm in 1208 TUR.

Job Talk: Lecturer Faculty

1/25/2018—3 pm—CSE E252—Corinna Most "Primates in a land of plenty: The effects of ecological change on female reproduction, maternal behavior, and infant development."

Job Talk: Lecturer Faculty

1/29/2018—3 pm—CSE E252—Ramey Moore "Our Land Is Not Just Soil: Knowing, Feeling, and Doing Environmental Activism in the Ozarks."

Job Talk: Lecturer Faculty

219 Dauer Hall

2/1/2018—3 pm—219 Dauer—Elizabeth Miles

Job Talk: Medical Anthropology Faculty

404 Grinter Hall

2/8/2018—4 pm—404 GRI—Adrienne Strong "Bureaucratic Proliferation, Surveillance, and Care Practices: The Partograph as Technology and Bureaucratic Document" The partograph, graphical representation of a pregnant woman’s labor, is a simple technology meant to help healthcare providers detect serious problems for the mother or her baby before she gives birth. Despite its presence in many low resource

Job Talk: Medical Anthropology Faculty

2/12/2018—4 pm—CSE E252—Kristen McLean "Engendering Change: Fatherhood, Masculinity and Resilience in the Context of Ebola." In this talk I will be focusing on the concept of resilience and asking how people construct and sustain wellbeing despite exposure to significant adversity. I will discuss my work on fatherhood, masculinity and psychosocial wellbeing in Sierra Leone, examining

Job Talk: Medical Anthropology Faculty

2/15/2018—4 pm—CSE E252—Emily Mendenhall "Syndemic Diabetes: Entanglements with Poverty, Trauma, and AIDS" This talk will introduce the concept of syndemics, a theory of how social and health problems travel together within and between populations. Dr. Mendenhall will discuss the concept of syndemic diabetes (type 2) through a discussion of her mixed methods research among low-income