2006 Annual Report

2006 Annual Report

Table of Contents

Chairman’s Foreword...... 3 President’s Report ...... 4

Program Highlights Research Grants and Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships ...... 6 International Programs ...... 12 International Symposia and Symposia Publications...... 14 Other Foundation Programs and Activities...... 15

Individual Research Grants Dissertation Fieldwork Grants ...... 17 Post-Ph.D. Research Grants ...... 26 Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships...... 30

Conference and Workshop Grants ...... 31 International Collaborative Research Grants...... 34 Wadsworth International Fellowships ...... 35 Initiatives Grants...... 38 Historical Archives Grants...... 39

Grant Making Statistics...... 40

Financial Statements...... 48

Leadership...... 58

Reviewers (during 2006)...... 59

Staff ...... 60

2 2006 Annual Report Chairman’s Introduction

Richard C. Hackney, Jr. Chairman of the Board of Trustees

In 2006 the Foundation has undergone a number of changes instituted by the new President, Leslie Aiello. Among these are the launch of the new Wenner-Gren website and the introduction of web-based application and review procedures. We have also revised and expanded the Foundation’s grant programs to ensure that we meet our mission to support significant and innovative anthropological research and to foster the creation of an international community of research scholars in . These are all discussed in the 2006 President’s Report that follows.

However, 2006 also marked another major change for the Foundation. This was the retirement of the longest-serving member of the Wenner-Gren Board of Trustees, Dr. Frank Wadsworth. Frank joined the Board in 1970 as a young English professor. Throughout his long tenure at Wenner-Gren, he has worked tirelessly and been an astute adviser for generations of trustees, staff and associated with the Foundation, not to mention four Wenner-Gren presidents. His 36 years of extraordinary service include ten years as Chairman of the Board of Trustees (1977-1987), ten years as Vice Chairman (1994-2004), membership in the Executive Committee since its inception in 1992, Chairman of the Nominating Committee (1987-2004), and crucial roles on three presidential search committees. The Foundation is indebted to him for its survival and well-being. He steered it through a period of crisis during his chairmanship, making some very difficult and at times unpopular decisions along the way.

The current strength of the Foundation, both its strong fiscal basis and the confidence it enjoys within the anthropological profession, is largely the result of his determination and guidance. In honor of his long-standing service, the Foundation has changed the name of its Professional Development International Fellowships program to the Wadsworth International Fellowships program. This program supports students and scholars from countries where anthropology is under-represented to study at internationally recognized institutions. In 2006 alone, twenty-six international students have been supported through this program.

Frank retired from the Board in May 2006 and his presence will be missed by the entire Wenner-Gren community. The Wadsworth International Fellowships program is just one small way that we will be reminded of the work, enthusiasm, and grace that he brought to the Foundation.

Richard C. Hackney Jr. Chairman, Board of Trustees 3 Wenner-Gren Foundation for 2006 Annual Report

President’s Report Anthropological Research

Leslie C. Aiello, President

This year saw the implementation of many of the initiatives that were planned and developed during 2005, my first year at the Foundation. We also have a number of new initiatives underway. On July 1 we launched a new website to provide a clear and intuitive portal for the Foundation’s many programs and other activities. We are particularly proud of the site's interactive map of the world showing the geo- graphical breadth of the research carried out by our grantees, the searchable grantee database, the overall design of the site and the ability it affords us to communicate easily and effectively with the an- thropological community. The numerous images on the website provided by our grantees also illustrate the breadth of modern anthropological research supported by the Foundation.

Together with the website we have also launched a web-based application and grant review system that has many advantages over the paper-based system previously in use. Among the most important bene- fits is the ability to promptly provide all grant applicants full reviewer feedback in time for those whose grants are declined to reapply for the next deadline, particularly those who are declined in the first stage of the review process. Other benefits include the ease with which applicants can now apply to the Foun- dation and the economies in processing the applications once received.

Along with this new public face of the Foundation, we have revised our information and application ma- terials with the aim of improving and clarifying all of our grant-making activities. We have also taken this opportunity to revise some of our programs in order to provide a better service to the field and increase the international reach of the Foundation. In particular, we have added a South African Fellowship to our Wadsworth International Fellowships program. This fellowship is designed to support African stu- dents working towards doctoral degrees at South African universities. It updates the Foundation’s long- term program of support to anthropology and archaeology at the University of Cape Town and the Uni- versity of the Witwatersrand. We also have expanded our Wadsworth Short-Term Fellowship to cover training opportunities as well as library research for international students and scholars from countries where anthropology is under-represented. In addition, we have increased the maximum amount of money available through the International Collaborative Research Grant to encourage training activities to help build anthropological capacity in countries where it is needed. Finally, we have laid the ground- work for a new Institutional Development Grant worth $125,000 over five years and designed to aid aca- demic departments in countries where anthropology is underdeveloped.

Over the past few years applications for our Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowship have increased considerably. While this reflected a definite need in the field for writing fellowships, there was also the danger that the

4 corresponding increase in the number of fellowship awards was shifting the focus of the Foundation from funding research to supporting the publication of research already completed. To maintain our pri- mary aim of funding anthropological research and encouraging international anthropology, these prestig- ious fellowships are now limited to eight or nine per year.

In addition to the steady increase in the number of Hunt Fellowship applications over the past few years, this year saw a particular increase in applications across all of our programs. We believe that the in- crease in applications for our individual awards is largely due to our new systems, which provide feed- back in time for declined applicants to apply again in the same year. The increase in our other programs is most probably due to the clarity of the new website, which better advertises the availability of these awards and facilitates the application procedure.

This year we have also actively promoted the Foundation by attending and presenting grant-writing workshops at a number of high-profile anthropological conferences including the American Association of Physical Anthropology (March, in Anchorage, Alaska), the European Anthropological Associa- tion (August, in Budapest, Hungary), the European Association of Social Anthropology (September, in Bristol, UK) and the American Anthropological Association (November, in San Jose, CA). At the AAA meeting we sponsored a number of additional events, including: an evening reception, where we intro- duced our new website and funding initiatives; a Presidential Panel, "Roots of Human Sociality: A Four- Field Approach," which stemmed from the 134th International Wenner-Gren Symposium on "The Roots of Human Sociality: Culture, Cognition and Interaction"; and a book launch reception for three interna- tional symposium volumes published in 2006.

These initiatives and activities could not have occurred without the enthusiasm and support of the Wen- ner-Gren Board of Trustees, the academic Advisory Council, and the Foundation staff. I would like to offer my sincerest thanks to the entire Wenner-Gren community which has supported me during my first year and a half at the Foundation, enabling the many developments we have achieved in this time and placing the Foundation on a secure footing that assures our continuing support for the field into the fu- ture.

Leslie C. Aiello President Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research

5 2006 Annual Report

Program Highlights: Research Grants and the Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships

The Foundation provides support for individual research through the Dissertation Research Grant and Post-Ph.D. Research Grant, and the writing-up of completed research through the Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowship. Across these categories, 161 grants were awarded during 2006 to scholars whose work reflects a range of interests and themes spanning the discipline. The following section highlights some of the themes and notable topics across the four fields (archaeology, physical-, linguistic anthropology, and social-cultural anthropology), illustrating the variety of research the Foundation supported during the year.

Archaeology

Out of 185 applicants who requested funds to support archaeology projects in 2006, thirty individuals were awarded research grants (including Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, Post-Ph.D. Grants and Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships). This year’s archaeological research projects covered a broad range of topics that spanned a wide temporal and geographical spectrum. As in past years, projects based on problem- oriented research that clearly address important and wide-ranging issues in anthropology were the most successful.

Two archaeological projects funded during the 2006 season examine the relationship between ceremonialism and quotidian practices performed by commoners to gain a more robust understanding of the ways in which ritual practice is embedded in daily life. Dr. Katherine F. Emery (University of Florida, Gainesville) combines methods and data derived from ethnoarchaeology, spatial archaeology and zooarchaeology in her investigation of the material correlates of rites associated with communal hunting shrines in highland Guatemala. By focusing on the identification of faunal remains included in ritual caches and their spatial distribution at hunting shrines, she seeks to determine the degree to which modern-day hunting ritual behaviors correspond to those of the past and shed light on the variable array of practices through which commoners infused mundane objects with sacred significance. Working at the Formative to Late Horizon (300 B.C. – A.D.1400) period site of Cañoncillo on the north coast of , Dr. Edward Swenson (University of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada) aims to ascertain whether changes in the organization of household space and domestic economy correlate with changes in ritual activity and the configuration of public architecture within the urban core and its surrounding hinterland. Using comparative analysis, he explores divergences in the production of space in domestic and ceremonial contexts over time to gain insights into political and ideological strategies through which long-term processes of urban power relations were negotiated.

Given the complex relationship between material culture and identity, attempts to infer prehistoric people’s social identities from archaeological materials pose a formidable challenge. Two projects set in New Mexico apply alternative approaches to the study of social identity. An innovative investigation into processes of informal identity formation, conducted by Bernard Schriever (University of Oklahoma, Norman) among three Mimbres communities, assesses the expectation that increased social interaction and decreased social distance among geographically dispersed communities produces similar practices through time. His analysis of synchronic variation and diachronic changes in shared practices (associated with the production of painted ceramics and obsidian procurement within and between communities) seeks to confirm the existence of a regional identity and provide the basis for exploring the conditions that promote the construction of social identities. In an attempt to examine how ethnicity is expressed in multidimensional and situational contexts, Jun Sunseri (University of California, Santa Cruz) focuses on everyday practices and processes of identity formation in multicultural settings located along the 18th century New Mexico frontier. Through his study of ceramic and faunal assemblages 6 Program Highlights, cont. (related to domestic foodways and the spatial relationships between economic and social landscapes of three buffer communities in a colonial borderland), he strives to identify microscale patterns of behavior and macroscale practices that reflect and shape broader categories of group identity, while understanding the flexible ways that frontier communities expressed different aspects of identities in different contexts at different moments.

Three projects address complex processes involved in the sociopolitical organization of ancient societies, including the roles that conflict and collaboration play in the development of social complexity. In Mexico, Dr. Leah D. Minc’s (Oregon State University, Corvallis) compositional analyses of ceramic pastes provides the insights into the organization of production and exchange of pottery manufactured in the Oaxaca Valley needed to evaluate the nature of regional integration and better understand the processes implicated in primary state formation. By studying the provenance of ceramic types to reconstruct networks of exchange among administrative centers, she evaluates which of two competing models of economic organization – cooperation or competition – best exemplifies the conditions surrounding the formation and consolidation of the Zapotec state at Monte Alban (500 B.C. – A.D. 200). And in the Sisala region of northwestern Ghana, Dr. Natalie J. Swanepoel (University of Pretoria, South Africa) investigates the nature of political organization of decentralized societies by exploring the relationship between big men, fortified hilltop settlements, and trade routes during a period of heightened conflict stemming from increased warfare and slave raiding in the 19th Century. Drawing on archaeological data, oral traditions, documentary evidence and ethnographic material, she examines: the impacts that fluctuating patterns of cooperation with and resistance to slave raiders had on decentralized communities; how these societies were molded by interactions with more centralized polities; and the political role of big men and their rise to power through the control of trade routes and prestige goods. Working at the tell site of Çatalhöyük in Turkey, Serena Love (Stanford University, Palo Alto, California) applies geoarchaeological approaches to see whether temporal and spatial variability in the composition of mud-brick architecture will enable her to draw inferences about social organization and gain insights into perceptions about place, identity and social processes involved in the construction of a Neolithic village community among early sedentary groups from the Eighth to Seventh Millennia B.C. Architecture at the site lacks obvious evidence for social inequality, and her primary goal is to discern the degree to which house- building activities – specifically the shift from community to household-based house-building activities – reflect changes in the organization of social relations that suggest the emergence of Dissertation Fieldwork Grantee Lukas Barton (University of California, Davis), collecting floatation samples from a Neolithic site social complexity. for his research project, "Human Diet and Domestication: A Critical Evaluation of Low-Level Food Production in Northwest China." Biological Anthropology

In 2006, Wenner-Gren received 140 applications for research in physical/biological anthropology and made thirty-four awards: twenty-two Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, twelve Post-Ph.D. Research Grants and one Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowship. The overall success rate was twenty-four percent. The largest number of applications were in the area of Primate Behavior (29.7%), followed by anthropological genetics (14.3%), skeletal (13.7%), hominid evolution (13.1%) and human biological variation (10.3%). Applications in the areas of dental anthropology, paleopathology and primate evolution made up the remaining 18.1%.

7 Program Highlights, cont.

Dr. Miriam Belmaker (Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was awarded a Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowship to prepare her research on the highly important Lower Paleolithic site of Ubeidiya (Israel) for publication. She has carried out an in-depth paleoecological analysis based on the large mammalian fauna of this site and has explored its implications for early human dispersal events out of Africa in the time period between 1.6 and 1.2 million years ago.

Examples of Dissertation Fieldwork and Post-Ph.D Research Grants in the various subfields of physical/ biological anthropology include the following. In primatology, Stephanie Bogart, a graduate student at Iowa State University (Ames, Iowa), is using her funds to examine the insectivorous diet of chimpanzees living in a unique dry savanna environment at the site of Fongoli in Senegal. The data she collects will enable her to explore the potential parallels with early human feeding behavior in presumably similar en- vironments on the African savanna in the Pliocene and early Pleistocene periods. In anthropological ge- netics, Dr. Heather Norton (University of Arizona, Tucson) is attempting to determine whether a series of genes are involved in producing variation in skin color among human populations and how that variation might have arisen through evolution. In palaeopathology, Kristin Harper, a graduate student at Emory University (Atlanta, Georgia), seeks to contribute to our understanding of the history of infectious disease, specifically the origin of syphilis and whether it was transmitted to the New World during the colonial pe- riod. Finally, in human evolution Dr. Darryl DeRuiter at Texas A&M University (College Station, Texas) will be leading a team investigating Pliocene deposits at a new site called the Virginia Dr. Marina Cords (Columbia University, New York City), a Post- Railway Cut in the Free State, South Ph.D. Research Grantee, holds up a successfully collected sample Africa. This locality could provide re- from a Blue Monkey living in the Kakamega Forest, Kenya, for her searchers with evidence about some of research project "Collective Action, Kinship and Reciprocity: Com- the earliest humans from South Africa. munal Territorial Defense in Old World Monkeys."

Linguistic Anthropology

The Foundation supported six projects in linguistic anthropology out of the thirty applications submitted in 2006. Application numbers were down slightly for linguistics but the success rate continues to be high, at twenty percent. Projects were funded in Ecuador, Germany, India, Israel, Spain and Wales. The range of projects funded highlights the way linguistic anthropology continues to be an exciting subfield making significant theoretical contribution to topics that have long been of interest to anthropology.

A thematic concern with the ways in which linguistic identity and language ideology mutually constitute each other unites many of the projects supported by the Foundation. In some, this concern is further re- lated to issues of language maintenance. Mary Andronis (University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois) is working in Ecuador on the Salasaca’s decision to guard their own dialect of Quichua in the face of standardization efforts. She is particularly interested in learning how language identity and linguistic ideology influence language maintenance. Working in a very interesting location and on a fascinating migrant community, Christina Davis (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) is asking how language ideologies operate in two distinct types of schools in India. She wants to explore the ways in which language and identity are both practiced and represented at these two sites in light of different linguistic ideologies. Shlomy Kattan (University of California, Berkeley) brings linguistic anthropology into the service of contemporary anthropological interests in multi-sited ethnography, transnational identity and

8 Program Highlights, cont. diaspora studies. While focusing on the linguistic ideologies among Israeli emissary families both at home and abroad, he asks how linguistic ideologies and language-socialization practices are constructed and operate. His focus is on how children are socialized in ways that teach them to maintain languages as well as often conflicting linguistic identities. Jennifer Quincey (Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri) is trying to capture a rare look at a language that is making a comeback. While working on Welsh, she is studying the influence of government-supported adult language socialization programs. In particular, she explores how and why textbook-based versions of the language are interacting with native variants in this process. Elizabeth Spreng (University of Illinois, Urbana) is working on the Sorbian language as it is spoken by a community in Germany. She is there to investigate how the life and death of a language is both maintained and challenged by different types of code switching, register mixing and language ideology. Finally, Dr. Kathryn Woolard (University of California, San Diego) considers bilingualism in Barcelona at the intersection of language ideology, policy and usage. The contribution here is an exciting one because the results will be added to comparable ones collected previously, thus providing a detailed picture of how a complex bilingual situation has developed over time.

Cultural/Social Anthropology

The Foundation received 611 applications requesting support for projects in cultural anthropology in 2006, of which ninety were awarded funding (including Post-Ph.D Research Grants, Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, and Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships). The Foundation supported research projects across the world that can make a strong case for theoretical and academic contributions to the discipline.

The range of projects funded in 2006 illustrates how students and scholars in the discipline continue to pay attention to how global processes and transnational actors create spaces for change in local places. This year sees a number of projects that focus on the impact of development and economic aid, from direct humanitarian interventions to consumer activism and social movements in the West. Projects continue to examine how these different interventions -- which are frequently the product of globalizing discourses -- imagine, recreate and are themselves reappropriated in particular situations.

Several projects investigate applied or practical concerns within public policy and apply their findings to larger theoretical debates in anthropology. Jesse Grayman from Harvard University, for example, is studying global discourses within humanitarian aid interventions. Such interventions have become instrumental in the management of world affairs as wars and environmental disasters demand immediate humanitarian responses from transnational organizations. Researching in Aceh, Indonesia, in the wake of the tsunami disasters, he focuses on the Indonesian staff who act as mediators between international humanitarian agencies and the national and local reality. Grayman asks what role these mediators play in defining the disaster as a national and local event that corresponds to (or clashes with) these globalizing discourses. Similarly, Svea Closser (Emory University) is examining a WHO worldwide campaign to eradicate polio to see how policies (developed by policy makers in the West) operate on the ground. She asks whether these public-health policies represent a new interface in the postcolonial world, where policy makers interpret barriers to success through their own categories. In rural Pakistan (where Closser is conducting fieldwork), “corruption” and “women’s status” have been identified as primary obstacles to program success, and she is studying how these categories reflect and impact local social organization. Heath Cabot (University of California, Santa Cruz) focuses on the large number of asylum seekers arriving in Greece, a new portal to contemporary Europe, and she questions how NGOs, lawyers and bureaucracies use the legal debates that are relevant to questions of citizenship and cultural identity in a country on the borderland of Europe that has struggled with a history of population movements into and out of the country.

While these projects focus on the question of global discourses related to humanitarian issues that broadly circulate around questions of human rights in extreme situations, other projects look at the growing numbers of programs and interventions designed to mitigate poverty. Both sustainable conservation projects and microfinance programs share these goals, attempting to intervene in specific places so as to generate new forms of agency and security for local actors. Anthropological research has shed light on some of the darker aspects of development goals as subaltern subjects are frequently 9 Program Highlights, cont. drawn into global processes and at times increasingly marginalized or incorporated into a capitalist system that does not promise long-term benefits. Two research projects investigate examples of these programs, but ask if such programs can actually generate any alternative spaces with the potential for new forms of social action and subjectivity that provides a more creative space for the program participants. Dr. Christopher Shepard (University of California, Berkeley) works in the Andes documenting how local and national conservation programs engage with local cultivators to encourage sustainable practices. He argues against the notion of a fixed “Andean” agriculture, however, and instead proposes that the process involves a variety of diverse practices throughout the region. The research plans to examine how different local knowledge is selectively drawn into conservation programs, and thus he plans to trace what the politics of knowledge are that facilitate this process, highlighting how local knowledge can be selectively utilized and marginalized. Meanwhile Debarati Sen (Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey) looks at how a consumer movement in the West (specifically Organic Fair Trade) impacts women tea farmers in Darjeeling, India. She researches these movements and asks if they engender a new creative space in India where women can mobilize as new political actors. The project’s value lies not only in its search for political agency among subaltern classes but also in its use of a comparative method; Ms. Sen looks at plantation workers who have a history of collective bargaining then compares them to women working within a cooperative organization to ask how different colonial and post-colonial structures engender political subjectivity under new economic conditions.

The Foundation continues to support projects that can demonstrate innovation, whether through methodological and interdisciplinary approaches or the exploration of new thematic problems. Two such projects employ unusual starting points that are indicative of anthropology’s special ability to embrace new methods and ideas. In a type of reverse gaze, Dr. Mwenda Ntarangwi (Augustana College, Rock Island, Illinois) will use his Hunt Fellowship to write a manuscript that traces his own experience and immersion into American culture, beginning with his arrival from Kenya to start graduate studies in cultural anthropology, to his subsequent transformation into a professor at an American college teaching students in both the and sometimes Africa. This “African” ethnography on cultural anthropology and academia in the United States continues the reflexive turn in ethnographic writing but also destabilizes some of the more unquestioned positions found in American academic culture. By interrogating life on a University campus, Dr. Ntarangwi contextualizes his observations within larger debates in anthropology about race, class and the "other." Based on ten years of detailed fieldnotes and journals, this manuscript promises to continue the contemporary debates about representation, ethnography and anthropological knowledge production in the United States that will be of value to students and scholars in the discipline. Highlighting the potential for interdisciplinary and/or subfield collaboration, the biocultural continues to be addressed in some truly innovative projects which seek a context for a real biocultural synthesis as opposed to assuming a hierarchical relationship between them.

Brandon Kohrt from Emory University researches the embodiment of trauma in Nepal, addressing both its phenomenology and the psycho- endocrinology. The investigation starts with the local Nepalese concept of the “heart-mind” and looks at the phenomenological experience of trauma, which he sees in the local concept of “wounded hearts and Brandon Kohrt (right) interviewing community leaders Ram Bahadur wounded minds” discussed in Sitawal (left) and Puru Regmi (center), discussing peace-building Nepalese culture. Through ethno- programs for children. Nalang, Dhading, Nepal. (February, 2007)

10 graphic research, Kohrt examines the endorsement of emotions and sensations related to trauma as well as the impairment in daily living normally associated with the experience of trauma among specific individuals. He also measures cortisol levels and other signs of endocrine functioning among a small sample group. As such the project is uniquely poised to make a contribution to larger questions about the mind-body relationship and address some of the more fundamental questions that anthropology faces today.

11 2006 Annual Report International Programs

One important part of the Foundation's mission is to support anthropology throughout the world. With specialized programs such as the Wadsworth Fellowship Program (which provides support to individuals who aspire to a level of further training unavailable in their own countries) and the International Collabo- rative Research Grant (which puts together researchers from different countries), the Foundation aims to fulfill this part of its mission.

The year 2006 saw many changes made to the Wenner-Gren Foundation’s International Programs. Not only were the application procedures and eligibility criteria restructured, but, more importantly, after sev- enteen years of service at the Wenner-Gren Foundation, Dr. Pamela Smith retired from her position as International Programs administrator at the end of the year. Dr. Smith put much time and effort into pro- moting the international programs, and her constant devotion to and interest in the international grantees was a hallmark of her tenure. Grantees, many of whom came from developing countries to begin their graduate studies or anthropological training in unfamiliar environments, knew they could count on her for guidance and advice. While grantees and staff miss her presence, the Foundation is delighted to fill her position through a joint appointment shared by Michael Muse and Judith Kreid, both of whom have worked extensively at the Foundation as consultants in the screening and peer review of grant propos- als. Their long-term experience with Foundation operations ensures that International Programs will con- tinue to play a vital role in helping Wenner-Gren achieve its worldwide goals.

The changes to the International Programs executed in 2006 have foreshadowed a very active period in 2007. As a result of the new Website and online application procedures, knowledge of these programs is now reaching new constituencies and enhancing the variety of projects and applicants seeking support under these programs.

Wadsworth International Fellowships

In honor of retiring Board of Trustee member Frank Wadsworth, the Foundation has changed the name of the Professional Development International Fellowships program to the Wadsworth International Fel- lowships program. Frank Wadsworth was the longest serving member of the Wenner-Gren Foundation Board of Trustees and worked tirelessly for the Foundation, ensuring it remained active even in the face of financial stress in the 1970s. It is thus fitting that this program, which strives to increase anthropologi- cal training throughout the world, be named for him.

There are three fellowships offered under the Wadsworth program: the Wadsworth International Fellow- ship; the Wadsworth Short-Term Fellowship; and the Wadsworth South African Fellowship.

The Wadsworth International Fellowship provides opportunities for students from lower-income countries where resources for anthropological training and practice are scarce. It prioritizes scholars who have not yet earned degrees from universities outside of their home countries. Given the growing number of ap- plications to this program, the Foundation now requires a preliminary statement to determine the eligibil- ity of the applicant. The Foundation has also implemented a March 1st deadline so that applicants can be evaluated as a group and selected on the basis of their academic excellence.

The Wadsworth Short-Term Fellowship is a new program that has evolved out of the former Library Fel- lowship. Awards of up to $5000 are available for students and established scholars from resource- scarce countries to access training or library resources abroad. The Wadsworth Short-Term Fellowship currently operates on an ongoing basis with no applicant submission deadlines. The goal is to provide more flexible support for individuals who could benefit from short stays at international caliber universi- ties or libraries where they can obtain training or access to anthropological literature that is not available in their home countries. 12 International Programs, continued

The Wadsworth South African Fellowships are similar to the Wadsworth International Fellowships but are awarded to African anthropology students for doctoral studies at a South African University. Only one of these is awarded each year and the Foundation is very excited to have awarded the first of these Wadsworth South African Fellowships to Tessa Campbell (below). The submission deadline for the South African Fellowship is December 15 to better accommodate the start of the academic year in the southern hemisphere.

2006 Wadsworth South African Fellow: Tessa Campbell

Tessa Campbell applied in 2006 to begin her training in Cape Town, South Africa in 2007. She completed a B.Sc. degree in Biology, Earth and Environmental Sciences in 2005, specializ- ing in both archaeology and in genetics and development. Her focus on genetics allowed her to gain practical experience us- ing a variety of genetic techniques, although her personal inter- ests remain focused on the intersection of anthropology and genetics. She is currently enrolled in a Masters/Ph.D. program at the University of Cape Town, where her research interests involve investigating ancient disease pathways and disease evolution through the use of modern and ancient DNA. Cur- rently she is engaged in research that aims to extract and ana- lyze ancient M. tuberculosis DNA from South African remains to answer questions about the evolution of M. tuberculosis and then address larger issues associated with human and disease migration in South Africa. This particular area of research, while being explored in other areas of the world, is underdeveloped in southern Africa, and little to no infrastructure exists to enable research using ancient DNA. Tessa plans to spend some time in the United States in order to learn the techniques and utilize the facilities available for ancient DNA work. She hopes to be able to contribute to the development of such facilities in South Africa at some time in the future.

International Collaborative Research Grants

The variety of projects funded by the International Collaborative Research Grants illustrate the range of research taking place in anthropology worldwide, and this work continues to be a source of pride at the Foundation. In 2006 the scope of the ICRG awards was expanded to include an optional training ele- ment for which supplemental funds are available to provide essential training for academic research par- ticipants (co-applicants, students, as well as other professional colleagues) in ICRG-funded projects. With this change, the Foundation aspires to assure that its resources can be channeled to support and enhance training and research in anthropology throughout the world. Proposals that include a training element can request up to a maximum of $35,000, of which no more than $10,000 can be budgeted for training purposes.

In 2006 the Foundation funded a variety of ICRG research projects with a total of eight new awards rep- resenting different subfields and international collaborations. For example Dr Elena Garcea from the University of Cassino in Italy is collaborating with Dr. Abdulaye Maga at IRSH/UAM in Niamey, Niger, to research Early and Middle Holocene adaptations across the Sahara-Sahel border. Meanwhile Dr. Olga Shevchenko from Williams College (Williamstown, Massachusetts) is working with Dr. Oksana Sark- isova at Moscow State University (Moscow, Russia) on a research project entitled “Snapshot Histories: Family Photography and Generational Memory of Russia's Socialist Century.”

13 International Programs, cont.

International Symposia and Symposia Publications

With a new president comes new direction, and after a full schedule of symposia and workshops the prior year, 2006 was largely devoted to laying down the groundwork for upcoming meetings and plan- ning future activity in the International Symposium Program (ISP).

The ISP office continued to explore ways to better dissemi-nate the findings from Foundation-sponsored meetings to a broader anthro-pological audience. In November 2006, Wenner-Gren convened a Presidential Panel at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in San Jose, California. The panel discussed topics from “Roots of Human Sociality,” a Wenner-Gren International Symposium organized by Nick Enfield and Steve Levinson in 2004. Panel participants discussed the position taken by the conference organizers (who propose that cooperation is one of the fundamental build- ing blocks of human sociality) and continued other debates from the conference using a four-field approach, highlighting the contri- Leslie Aiello makes her case at the Presidential Panel, butions of biological, linguistic, cultural, and "Roots of Human Sociality: A Four-Field Approach," as archaeological perspectives. Stephen Levinson looks on.

In addition to the panel, the Foundation or- ganized a book launch with Berg Publishers to showcase three volumes from its Wenner- Gren International Symposium series: Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture (edited by Elizabeth Edwards, Chris Gosden, and Ruth B. Phillips); Roots of Human Sociality: Culture, Cognition, and Interaction (edited by N.J Enfield and Stephen Levinson); and World : Disciplinary Transformations within Systems of Power (edited by Gustavo Lins Ribeiro and Arturo Escobar), which is also being translated into Spanish and Portuguese. Supplies at the book launch quickly sold out and sales continue to be strong, signaling both the interest of the topics raised by the symposia and the Karen Strier, Agustin Fuentes, and Nick Enfield browse the success of the Foundation’s efforts to latest volumes from the International Symposia Series on publicize them. display at the AAA.

14 2006 Annual Report Other Foundation Programs and Activities

The Conference and Workshop Program

This program continued to revitalize during 2006, and the Foundation was pleased to award twenty- seven grants from a pool of thirty-nine applications with a success rate of 74%. Both the workshop pro- gram, designed to assist small working meetings, and conference grants, awarded to large professional associations to hold international conferences, promote the Foundation’s mission to advance significant and innovative research and to build an international community of anthropologists.

The four fields of anthropology were well represented among the seventeen workshops and ten confer- ences supported. Reflecting anthropologists' interest in being engaged and contributing to contempo- rary debates, cultural anthropologists at two workshops discussed the discipline’s approach to global and national security, while a team of Portuguese scholars convened their third conference on "Ethnography and the Public Sphere." Biological anthropologists continued to discuss multiple aspects of evolution and human origins in workshops and conferences held in such diverse locals as Stony Brook, Nairobi, and KwaZulu-Natal Game Reserve. Primatologists gathered in Chicago to analyze "The Mind of the Chimpanzee," a conference that attracted widespread media attention. Meanwhile, linguists, educators and community members came together in Window Rock, Arizona, to update research on Athabaskan languages, and European archaeologists held their annual meeting in Krakow. Poland was also the setting for a workshop on "Archaeological Invisibility and Forgotten Knowledge" held at the Uni- versity of Lodz. Other grants assisted meetings on such topics as justice and diversity, Asia-Pacific childhoods, slavery in ancient prestate societies, and anthropologies of the Western world, as well as supporting international conferences sponsored by, among others, the European Association of Social Anthropologists and the Chilean Anthropology Congress.

Current Anthropology

We continue to work closely with University of Chicago Press to ensure that Current Anthropology (CA) maintains its position as the leading broad-based international anthropological journal in the field. In re- cent years the journal has faced a number of challenges in relation to electronic publication and its effect on the subscription base, and we are in the process of developing a new business model that will guar- antee the journal's continued viability and success.

While the Foundation has been working on the business side of the journal, Dr. Ben Orlove, editor of CA, has been continuing to ensure that it demonstrates the strengths that give it importance within the field of anthropology. In 2006 a new design was implemented, including a different look to the cover along with changes to the typefaces and layout. In addition, abstracts, formerly provided only for major articles are now being included for contributions in the Reports section and will offer readers helpful summaries of their main points. A new section, “Current Applications,” was also introduced. Items in this section present work conducted by anthropologists who address the problems and needs of specific communities, collectivities, organizations and agencies. This section supports the commitment of the journal to discuss the role of anthropology, not only in the academy but also in public life. Finally, there was a change in frequency of publication of the journal, which will now be published six times a year rather than five. This is largely a response to the steady flow of excellent manuscripts and to our desire to recognize and accommodate the continuing growth of anthropology.

Dr. Orlove, who has been editor of CA since 2000, will be retiring from the editorship in spring 2008. The Foundation, in collaboration with University of Chicago Press, launched an international search for a new editor in November 2006 and a new editor will be appointed in May 2007. 15 Other Foundation Programs and Activities, cont.

The Wenner-Gren/University of Pennsylvania Casting Program

From 1962 to 1975, the Wenner-Gren Foundation sent mold makers to virtually every major hominid fossil site in the world. The resulting AnthroCast Program was the primary source of fossil casts relevant to human and primate evolution until it was terminated in the late 1970s. Since that time the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology has held the Wenner-Gren collection of molds and has been able to provide a limited number of casts to the anthropological community. The Founda- tion is currently working with Dr. Janet Monge and the Penn casting program to bring some of these casts back into commercial production. We hope to interest a commercial casting company in working with us to this end. The main purpose behind this initiative is to provide a much needed service to the field while at the same time ensuring that royalties for the casts are returned to the museums that hold the original fossils.

Historical Archives Program

The Foundation continues to help preserve the history of anthropology by assisting senior scholars with archiving their personal research . Awards in 2006 included funding to prepare the research materials and professional papers of Ruth Bunzel, Carol Kramer, and Alan Harwood for archival deposit at the National Anthropological Archives in Suitland, Maryland, as well as Taras Mikhaylov’s personal research collection on Siberian shamanism with the Historical Museum of Buryatia in Ulan–Ude, Russia. The HAP also provides limited support for small-scale oral-history projects, either with eminent figures from disci- pline history or team members involved in landmark research projects. To this end, Dr. Frances Joan Mathien (Albuquerque, New Mexico) was granted funding to carry out oral-history interviews with anthro- pologists who participated in the Chaco Canyon field schools of the 1930s and 1940s, as well as mem- bers from the Chaco Project (1969-1985), to gain a richer understanding of how project direction, stu- dent responsibilities, and other activities (that may or may not have been part of formal training) were assigned and conducted at the Chaco Canyon site.

16 2006 Annual Report Dissertation Fieldwork Grants

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation

Abraham, Sarah Jane Abraham, Sarah Jane, U. of California, Santa Barbara, CA - California, Santa Barbara, U. of To aid research on 'Provincial Life in the Inca Empire: Conti- nuity and Change at Hatun Lucanas, Peru,' supervised by Dr. Katharina Jeanne Schreiber Aciksoz, Salih Can Aciksoz, Salih Can, U. of Texas, Austin, TX - To aid research Texas, Austin, U. of on 'Broken Sons of The Nation: Masculinity, Disability, and Nationalism in Turkey' supervised by Dr. Kamran Asdar Ali

Alfonso Durruty, Marta Alfonso Durruty, Marta P., Binghamton U., Binghamton, New New York, Binghamton, State Pilar York - To aid research in 'Analysis of Harris Line in Relation U. of to Non-Linear, Saltatory Growth Patterns,' supervised by Dr. Michael A. Little Ambikaipaker, Mohan Ambikaipaker, Mohan, U. of Texas, Austin, TX - To aid re- Texas, Austin, U. of search on 'Antiracist Activism and the Decline of Multicultur- alism in East London,' supervised by Dr. Joao Costa Vargas

Andronis, Mary Antonia Andronis, Mary Antonia, U. of Chicago, Chicago, IL - To aid Chicago, U. of research on 'Salasaca and Quichua: Language Shift and Ideology in Ecuador,' supervised by Dr. Amy Dahlstrom

Arnedo, Luisa Fernanda Arnedo, Luisa Fernanda, U. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI - To Wisconsin, Madison, U. of aid research on 'Variation and Social Functions of Neigh Vocalization in the Northern Muriqui (Brachyteles hypoxan- thus),' supervised by Dr. Karen B. Strier Banahan, Joan Patricia Banahan, Joan Patricia, U. of Toronto, Toronto, Canada - To Toronto, U. of aid research on 'Small Site Archaeology: Complex Hunter- Gatherer Settlement, Mobility, and Resource Production,' supervised by Dr. Gary Graham Coupland Barton, Loukas William Barton, Loukas William, U. of California, Davis, CA - To aid California, Davis, U. of research on 'Human Diet and Domestication: A Critical Evaluation of Low-Level Food Production in Northwest China,'supervised by Dr. Robert Lawrence Bettinger Basarudin, Azzarina Basarudin, Azzarina, U. of California, Los Angeles, CA - To California, Los Angeles, U. of aid research on 'Recreating Communities of the Faithful?: Negotiating Gender, Religion, and Feminism in Egypt and Malaysia,' supervised by Dr. Sondra Hale Bessire, Lucas Britton Bessire, Lucas Britton, New York U., New York, NY - To aid New York U. research on 'Becoming the Ayoreo: Shortwave Radio, Power, and Emergent Indigenous Identities in the Gran Chaco,' supervised by Dr. Fred R. Myers Beyin, Amanuel Yosief Beyin, Amanuel Yosief, State U. of New York, Stony Brook, New York, Stony Brook, State NY - To aid 'Paleolithic Investigation on the Red Sea Coast U. of of Eritrea,' supervised by Dr. John J. Shea

Bigham, Abigail Winslow Bigham, Abigail Winslow, Penn State U., University Park, PA Pennsylvania State U. - To aid research on 'Signatures of Natural Selection among Populations of the Andean Altiplano and the Tibetan Pla- teau,' supervised by Dr. Mark David Shriver

17 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation Binetti, Katie Marie Binetti, Katie Marie, Yale U., New Haven, CT - To aid re- Yale U. search on 'Early Pliocene Hominin Paleoenvironments in the Tugen Hills, Kenya,' supervised by Dr. Andrew Hill

Blajko, Anton Vyachesla- Blajko, Anton Vyacheslavovich, Saint-Petersburg State U., St. Petersburg State U. vovich Saint-Petersburg, Russia - To aid research on 'The Begin- ning of the Upper Paleolithic in the Northwestern Caucasus,' supervised by Dr. Lubov V. Golovanova

Bogart, Stephanie Lynn Bogart, Stephanie Lynn, Iowa State U., Ames, IA - To aid Iowa State U. research on 'Insectivory and Savanna Apes: Tool Use and Diet of Fongoli Chimpanzees,' supervised by Dr. Jill Daphne Pruetz

Bridges, Khiara M. Bridges, Khiara M., Columbia U., New York, NY - To aid Columbia U. research on 'Reproducing Race,' supervised by Dr. Nicholas Paul De Genova

Cabot, Heath Cabot, Heath, U. of California, Santa Cruz, CA - To aid California, Santa Cruz, U. of 'Asylum and Advocacy in Athens: An Ethnography of NGO Politics on the Hellenic Frontier,' supervised by Dr. Donald Lawrence Brenneis

Campoamor, Leigh Campoamor, Leigh Miranda, Duke U., Durham, NC - To aid Duke U. Miranda research on 'The Cultural Politics of Child Labor in Peru,' supervised by Dr. Orin Raymond Starn

Cano Secade, Maria Del Cano Secade, Maria Del Carmen, U. Iberoamericana, Mex- Iberoamericana U. Carmen ico D.F., Mexico - To aid 'Political Ecology, Sustainability and Environment: An Ethnography of the Conflict Over Water in Matamoros Region,' supervised by Dr. Casey Walsh Henry

Casas-Cortes, Maria Casas-Cortes, Maria Isabel, U. of North Carolina, Chapel North Carolina, Chapel Hill, U. Isabel Hill, NC - To aid research on 'Expertise from Below: The of Cultural Politics of Knowledge, Globalization and the Activist Research Movement in Spain, supervised by Dr. Arturo Escobar Chattaraj, Durba Chattaraj, Durba, Yale U., New Haven, CT - To aid research Yale U. on 'Between the City and the Sea:Transport and Connectivity in West Bengal,' supervised by Dr. Thomas Blom Hansen

Chio, Jenny Treugen Chio, Jenny Treugen, U. of California, Berkeley, CA - To aid California, Berkeley, U. of research on 'Landscape of Travel: Tourism, Media, and Iden- tity in Southwest China,' supervised by Dr. Nelson Henry Graburn

Cho, Mun Young Cho, Mun Young, Stanford U., Stanford, CA - To aid re- Stanford U. search on 'When Does Poverty Matter? Managing Differen- tial Impoverishments in the People's Republic of China,' su- pervised by Dr. James Ferguson

Clark, Terence N. Clark, Terence N., U. of Toronto, Toronto, Canada - To aid Toronto, U. of research on 'Rewriting Marpole: The Path to Cultural Com- plexity in the Gulf of Georgia,' supervised by Dr. Gary Coupland

Closser, Svea Hupy Closser, Svea Hupy, Emory U., Atlanta, GA - To aid research Emory U. on 'Global Development in Policy and Practice: The Polio Eradication Initiative from Atlanta to Rural Pakistan,' super- vised by Dr. Peter John Brown

Cowgill, Libby Windred Cowgill, Libby Windred, Washington U., St. Louis, MO - To Washington U., St. Louis aid research on 'Ontogeny of Long Bone Diaphyses in Imma- ture Late Pleistocene Postcrania,' supervised by Dr. Erik Trinkaus 18 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation

Cuffe, Jennifer Lynn Cuffe, Jennifer Lynn, McGill U., Montreal, Canada - To aid McGill U. research on 'Configuring Commensurability: Number and Cultural Diversity in the Evaluation of Traditional Herbal Medicines, Ottawa, Canada,' supervised by Dr. Allan Young

Dahl, Bianca Jane Dahl, Bianca Jane, U. of Chicago, Chicago, IL - To aid re- Chicago, U. of search on 'Transforming Children: The Contested Socializa- tion of Orphaned Youth in Contemporary Botswana,' super- vised by Dr. Jennifer Cole

Darmadi, Dadi Darmadi, Dadi, Harvard U., Cambridge, MA - To aid research Harvard U. on 'The Hajj, Reinvented: Pilgrimage, Mobility and Inter-State Organizations in Saudi Arabia and Indonesia,' supervised by Dr. Engseng Ho

Davis, Christina Parks Davis, Christina Parks, U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI - To Michigan, Ann Arbor, U. of aid research on 'Language Practices and Ideologies of Differ- ence in Sri Lanka' supervised by Dr. Judith T. Irvine

De Groote, Isabelle De Groote, Isabella Elisabeth, U. College London, London, College London, U. Elisabeth UK - To aid 'A Comprehensive Analysis of Long Bone Curva- ture in Neanderthals,' supervised by Dr. Charles Abram Lockwood

DeGelder, Mettje Chris- DeGelder, Mettje Christine, U. of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Can- Toronto, U. of tine ada - To aid research on 'Calvinist Reformed Religiosity and Outreach among Afrikaner and Black Christians in Pretoria, South Africa,' supervised by Dr. Michael Joshua Lambek

Fernando, Wiroshana Fernando, Wiroshana Nuwanpriya Oshan, U. of California, California, Santa Barbara, U. of Nuwanpriya Oshan Santa Barbara, CA - To aid research on 'The Effects of Evangelical Christianity on State Formation in Sri Lanka,' supervised by Dr. Mary Elizabeth Hancock

Fish, Allison Elizabeth Fish, Allison Elizabeth, U. of California, Irvine, CA - To aid California, Irvine, U. of research on 'Owning Transnational Yoga: Intellectual and Cultural Property Claims to a Traditional Practice,' super- vised by Dr. William Michael Maurer

Fisher, Carolyn Frances Fisher, Carolyn Frances, The Graduate Center - City U. of New York, Graduate Center, New York, New York, NY - To aid research on 'Do Gourmet City U. of Fair Trade Markets Produce Inequality among Small-Scale Nicaraguan Coffee Farmers?,' supervised by Dr. Marc Edel- man Fitz-Henry, Erin Eliza- Fitz-Henry, Erin Elizabeth, Princeton U., Princeton, NJ - To Princeton U. beth aid research on 'The Militarization of Manta,' supervised by Dr. Carol J. Greenhouse Ford, Randall Thomas Ford, Randall Thomas, Duke U., Durham, NC - To aid re- Duke U. search on 'The Role of Female Mate Choice in Mantled Howling Monkey Reproduction,' supervised by Dr. Kenneth Earl Glander Fujita, Masako Fujita, Masako, U. of Washington, Seattle, WA - To aid 'An Washington, U. of Evolutionary Perspective on Mother-Offspring Vitamin A Transfer,' supervised by Dr. Bettina Shell Duncan Funahashi, Daena Aki Funahashi, Daena Aki, Cornell U., Ithaca, NY - To aid re- Cornell U. search on 'Social Order and its Borders: Exploring Depres- sion in Finland,' supervised by Dr. Dominic C. Boyer

Gandhi, Ajay Gandhi, Ajay, Yale U., New Haven, CT - To aid research on Yale U. 'The Banality of Criminality: The Moral Economy of Illegal Behavior in Delhi, India,' supervised by Dr. Thomas Blom Hansen

19 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation

Gibbings, Sheri Lynn Gibbings, Sheri Lynn, U. of Toronto, ON, Canada - To aid Toronto, U. of research on 'Building a Street, Building a Nation: Architec- ture, Urban Space, and National Belonging on Malioboro Street in Yogyakarta, Indonesia,' supervised by Dr. Tania Murray Li Gilbert, Hannah Nora Gilbert, Hannah Nora, McGill U., Montreal, Canada - To aid McGill U. research on 'From Laboratory to Clinic: An Ethnographic Examination of HIV Therapeutic Knowledge and Practice in Senegal,' supervised by Dr. Vinh-Kim Nguyen Glotzer, Louis Daniel Glotzer, Louis Daniel, U. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA - Pennsylvania, U. of To aid research on 'Diffeomorphic Analysis of Human Prena- tal Neuroanatomy: A Quantitative Assessment of Morphoge- netic Patterns in the Developing Neocortex,' supervised by Dr. Theodore Schurr Golitko, Mark Louis Golitko, Mark Louis, U. of Illinois, Chicago, IL - To aid re- Illinois, Chicago, U. of search on 'Chemical Characterization of Linienbandkeramik (LBK) Ceramics by ICP-MS,' supervised by Dr. Lawrence Harold Keeley

Grayman, Jesse Hession Grayman, Jesse Hession, Harvard U., Cambridge, MA - To Harvard U. aid research on 'Localizing the Global Discourse on Humani- tarianism: Indonesian NGO Workers and Tsunami Relief in Aceh,' supervised by Dr. Byron Good

Grill, Jan Grill, Jan, U. of St. Andrews, Fife, United Kingdom - To aid St. Andrews, U. of research on 'On the Margins of the States: Contesting Roma Identifications and Belonging in the Slovak Borderlands,' supervised by Dr. Paloma Gay y Blasco

Halili, Rigels Halili, Rigels, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland Polish Academy of Sciences - To aid research on 'Oral Epic Poetry in Kosovo and Sandzak Nowadays,' supervised by Dr. Andrzej Mencwel

Hardardottir, Kristin Erla Hardardottir, Kristin Erla, U. of Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland - Iceland, U. of To aid research on 'The Biomedicalization of Colon Cancer in Iceland,' supervised by Dr. Gisli Palsson Harper, Kristin Nicole Harper, Kristin Nicole, Emory U., Atlanta, GA - To aid re- Emory U. search on 'The Origin of Syphilis and the Evolution of the Treponema Pallidum Subspecies: A Phylogenetic Approach,' supervised by Dr. George John Armelagos

Heimsath, Kabir Man- Heimsath, Kabir Mansingh, Oxford U., Oxford, UK - To aid Oxford U. singh research on 'Lhasa Contemporary: Urban Spaces and Ti- betan Practices,' supervised by Dr. Marcus Banks

Henne, Adam Peters Henne, Adam Peters, U. of Georgia, Athens, GA - To aid Georgia, U. of research on 'The Social Life of Wood: Nature, Knowledge, and Commodity Fetishism in Chilean Forest Certification,' supervised by Dr. Peter Brosius

Howard, Maureen Pene- Howard, Maureen Penelope, U. of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Aberdeen, U. of lope Scotland, UK - To aid research on 'Seascapes: Voyaging Through the Movements of Experience, Histories, and Ecol- ogy,' supervised by Dr. Arnar Arnason

Hunleth, Jean Marie Hunleth, Jean Marie, Northwestern U., Evanston, IL - To aid Northwestern U. research on 'Managing TB: Households, Children, and IIl- ness in Lusaka, Zambia,' supervised by Dr. Karen Tranberg Hansen 20 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation Jarrin, Alvaro Esteban Jarrin, Alvaro Esteban, Duke U., Durham, NC - To aid re- Duke U. search on ''The Right to Beauty': Cosmetic Citizenship and Medical Modernity in Brazil,' supervised by Dr. Anne Allison

Johnson, Jessica Ann Johnson, Jessica Ann, U. of Washington, Seattle, WA - To Washington, U. of aid research on 'The Same-Sex Marriage Debate in Wash- ington State,' supervised by Dr. Ann Anagnost

Jung, Jin-Heon Jung, Jin-Heon, U. of Illinois, Urbana, IL - To aid research on Illinois, Urbana, U. of 'Post-Division Citizenship: The Christian Encounters of North Korean Refugees and South Korean Protestant Church,' supervised by Dr. Nancy Abelmann Kattan, Shlomy Kattan, Shlomy, U. of California, Berkeley, CA - To aid California, Berkeley, U. of 'Language Socialization and Language Ideologies among Israeli Emissaries: A Global Ethnography of Transnational- ism,' supervised by Dr. Sahara Patricia Baquedano-Lopez Klopp, Emily Bernice Klopp, Emily Bernice, Northwestern U., Chicago, IL - To aid Northwestern U. research on 'Primate Sexual Dimorphism and Display: Intras- pecific Scaling of Craniofacial Features in Male Cercopithe- coids,' supervised by Dr. Brian T. Shea

Kohrt, Brandon Alan Kohrt, Brandon Alan, Emory U., Atlanta, GA - To aid re- Emory U. search on 'Wounded Hearts, Wounded Minds: The Embodi- ment of Trauma in Nepal,' supervised by Dr. Carol Marie Worthman

Larchanche-Kim, Larchanche-Kim, Stephanie, Southern Methodist U., Dallas, Southern Methodist U. Stephanie TX - To aid research on 'The Cultural Politics of Immigrant Health: The Experience of West African Women in Paris, France,' supervised by Dr. Carolyn Sargent

Laven, Nina Laven, Nina, U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI - To aid research Michigan, Ann Arbor, U. of on 'Remaking Ancestry, Redrawing Aboriginality: The Life of Family Trees in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec,' super- vised by Dr. Alaina Maria Lemon

Lee, Tina Marie Lee, Tina Marie, CUNY-Graduate Center, New York, NY - To New York, Graduate Center, aid research on 'Stratified Reproduction and Definitions of City U. of Child Neglect: State Practices and Parents' Response,' su- pervised by Dr. Leith Mullings

Listman, Jennifer Beth Listman, Jennifer Beth, New York U., New York, NY - To aid New York U. research on 'Genetic Marker Bias Effects on Inferences of Human Evolutionary History,' supervised by Dr. Todd Rich- ard Disotell

Lofink, Hayley Elizabeth Lofink, Hayley Elizabeth, U. of Oxford, Oxford, UK - To aid Oxford U. research on 'Underweight, Overweight, and Obesity in British Bangladeshi Adolescents, in East London,' supervised by Dr. Stanley J. Ulijaszek

Love, Serena Helen Love, Serena Helen, Stanford U., Stanford, CA - To aid Stanford U. 'Building a Neolithic Community Through Architecture: A Case Study from Catalhoyuk, Turkey,' supervised by Dr. Ian Hodder Mangeango, Azande Mangeango, Azande, U. of Chicago, Chicago, IL - To aid Chicago, U. of research on 'Cultural Revivalism, Returnees, and the Roam- ing Trans/Nation: Predicaments of a Post-War Sudan,' su- pervised by Dr. Jean Comaroff

21 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation Marchesi, Milena Marchesi, Milena, U. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA - To Massachusetts, Amherst, U. of aid research on 'Remaking Subjects: Cultural Politics, Prac- tices, and Technologies of Fertility in Italy,' supervised by Dr. Elizabeth Louise Krause

Maunaguru, Sidharthan Maunaguru, Sidharthan, Johns Hopkins U., Baltimore, MD - Johns Hopkins U. To aid research on 'Brokering Marriage: War, Displacement, and the Production of Futures among Jaffna Tamils,' super- vised by Professor Veena Das

McCabe, Carl Wesley McCabe, Carl Wesley, U. of California, Davis, CA - To aid California, Davis, U. of research on 'Informal Institutions and Cooperative Behavior: Motivations for Prosociality by Marketplace Vendors in Bei- jing, China,' supervised by Dr. Bruce Paul Winterhalder

McKay, Ramah Kathe- McKay, Ramah Katherine, Stanford U., Stanford, CA - To aid Stanford U. rine research on 'Medical Welfare in Neoliberal Times: Transna- tional Philanthropy, the Family, the Ethics of Care in Mozam- bique,' supervised by Dr. James Ferguson

Meyers-Galemba, Re- Meyers-Galemba, Rebecca Berke, Brown U., Providence, RI Brown U. becca Berke - To aid research on 'Contesting Security: Everyday Cross- ings at the Mexico - Guatemala Border,' supervised by Dr. Kay Warren

Nakhshina, Maria Nakhshina, Maria, Aberdeen U., Aberdeen, UK - To aid re- Aberdeen, U. of search on 'Making Sense of Home: Movement and Metaphor among Villagers and Townspeople in the Kola Peninsula,' supervised by Dr. Tim Ingold O'Neill, Kevin Lewis O'Neill, Kevin Lewis, Stanford U., Stanford, CA - To aid re- Stanford U. search on 'Producing Christian Citizenship: Evangelical Mega-Churches in Postwar Guatemala City,' supervised by Dr. James Ferguson Oenning da Silva, Rita Oenning da Silva, Rita de Cacia, U. Federal of Santa Ca- Santa Catarina, Federal U. of de Cacia tarina, Florianopolis, Brazil - To aid research on 'Child Per- formers on the Street,' supervised by Dr. Esther Jean Lang- don Orr, Caley Michael Orr, Caley Michael, Arizona State U., Tempe, AZ - To aid Arizona State U. research on 'Evolutionary Morphology of the Anthropoid Wrist and the Evolution of Knuckle-Walking Locomotion in the Hominidae,' supervised by Dr. Mark Alan Spencer Osterweil, Michal Osterweil, Michal, U. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC - To North Carolina, Chapel Hill, U. aid research on 'Theoretical Practice and the Remaking of of the Political: An Ethnography of Italy's 'movimento dei movimenti',' supervised by Dr. Arturo Escobar

Ozarkar, Shantanu Sat- Ozarkar, Shantanu Satish, U. of Pune, Pune, India - To aid Pune, U. of ish research on 'Mitochondrial DNA Diversity among Indo- European Language Speaking Agricultural Tribes of Ma- harashtra, India,' supervised by Dr. Bhaskaran Vijay Bhanu

Parks, Maria Shannon Parks, Maria Shannon, Texas A&M U., College Station, TX - Texas A&M U. To aid research on 'Testing the Subsistence Model for the Adoption of Ceramic Technology among Coastal Foragers of Southeastern Brazil,' supervised by Dr. Lori Ellen Wright

Peano, Irene Peano, Irene, U. of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK - To aid re- Cambridge, U. of search on 'Sex-Trafficking between Nigeria and Italy: A Study of Networks, Personhood and the Commodification of Humans,' supervised by Dr. Marilyn Strathern 22 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation Perry, George Herbert Perry, George Herbert, Arizona State U., Tempe, AZ - To aid Arizona State U. research on 'The Evolutionary Significance of Copy-Number Variation on the Human and Chimpanzee Sex Chromo- somes,' supervised by Dr. Anne Carol Stone

Peters, Alicia Wood Peters, Alicia Wood, Columbia U., New York, NY - To aid Columbia U. research on 'Interpretation, Mediation, and Implementation of U.S. Anti-Trafficking Law and Policy: Women, NGOs, and the State,' supervised by Dr. Carole Susan Vance

Pfeil, Gretchen Elisabeth Pfeil, Gretchen Elisabeth, U. of Chicago, Chicago, IL - To aid Chicago, U. of research on 'Reckoning Charity's Risks and Rewards: Sufi Muslim Alms and Evangelical Missionary Gifts in Urban Senegal,' supervised by Dr. Michael Silverstein Prassack, Kari Alyssa Prassack, Kari Alyssa, Rutgers U., New Brunswick, NJ - To Rutgers U. aid research on 'Paleoecological Significance of Fossil Birds at Olduvai: An Ecologically-Based Neotaphonomic Ap- proach,' supervised by Dr. Robert John Blumenschine Prendergast, Mary Eliza- Prendergast, Mary Elizabeth, Harvard U., Cambridge, MA - Harvard U. beth To aid research on 'Forager Variability on the Eve of Food Production: Kansyore Subsistence Strategies in Kenya and Tanzania,' supervised by Dr. Richard Henry Meadow

Quincey, Jennifer Anne Quincey, Jennifer Anne, Washington U., St. Louis, MO - To Washington U., St. Louis aid research on 'Welsh Language Revitalization: Normative Signals and Adult Linguistic Socialization,' supervised by Dr. John Richard Bowen

Ruette, Krisna Ruette, Krisna, U. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ - To aid research Arizona, U. of on 'Law-Making Processes of Indigenous and Afro- Descendent Movements in Falcon Venezuela,' supervised by Dr. Ana Maria Alonso

Ruigrok, Inge Mariette Ruigrok, Inge Mariette, Free U., Amsterdam, The Nether- Free U. lands - To aid research on 'Negotiating Governance: Politics, Decentralization, and Cultural Ideology in Post-War Angola,' supervised by Dr. Jon Abbink

Sadre-Orafai, Stephanie Sadre-Orafai, Stephanie Neda, New York U., New York, NY- New York U. Neda To aid research on 'Producing Racial and Ethnic Types: Lan- guage, Perception & Embodied Differences in New York's Fashion Industry,' supervised by Dr. Bambi B. Schieffelin

Schel, Anne Marijke Schel, Anne Marijke, U. of St. Andrews, Fife, UK - To aid St. Andrews, U. of research on 'Effects of Predation Pressure on Black and White Colobine Referential Communication,' supervised by Dr. Klaus Zuberbuehler

Schiller, Naomi Ann Schiller, Naomi Ann, New York U., New York, NY - To aid New York U. research on 'Making Media, Making Producers: Community Media and the Production of Collective Subjectivity in Cara- cas, Venezuela,' supervised by Dr. Thomas Abercrombie

Schriever, Bernard Adolf Schriever, Bernard Adolf, U. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK - To Oklahoma, U of aid research on 'Informal Identity and the Mimbres Phenome- non: Investigating Regional Identity and Archaeological Cul- tures,' supervised by Dr. Patricia Ann Gilman

Schroeder, Kari Britt Schroeder, Kari Britt, U. of California, Davis, CA - To aid California, Davis, U. of research on 'Evaluating Models of Population Structure for Native North America,' supervised by Dr. David Glenn Smith

23 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation Sen, Debarati Sen, Debarati, Rutgers U., New Brunswick, NJ - To aid re- Rutgers U. search on ''From Illegal to Organic': Fair Trade-Organic Tea Production and Women's Political Futures in Darjeeling, In- dia,' supervised by Dr. Dorothy L. Hodgson

Shi, Lihong Shi, Lihong, Tulane U., New Orleans, LA - To aid research Tulane U. on 'Embracing a Singleton-Daughter: An Emerging Transition of Reproductive Choice in Rural Northeast China,' super- vised by Dr. Shanshan Du

Silian, Alina Petronela Silian, Alina Petronela, Central European U., Budapest, Hun- Central European U. gary - To aid research on 'Identity Politics, Knowledge Pro- duction, and Governmentality: The Romani Politics of Differ- ence in Romania,' supervised by Dr. Ayse S. Caglar

Skinner, Ryan Thomas Skinner, Ryan Thomas, Columbia U., New York, NY - To aid Columbia U. research on 'Sound and Subjectivity: Music, Modernity, and Mogoya in Postcolonial Bamako, Mali,' supervised by Dr. Aaron Andrew Fox

Smith, Heather Frances Smith, Heather Frances, Arizona State U., Tempe, AZ - To Arizona State U. aid research on 'Comparison of Human Population Distances Using Genetic and Craniometric Data,' supervised by Dr. Mark Alan Spencer

Snellinger, Amanda Snellinger, Amanda Therese, Cornell U., Ithaca, NY - To aid Cornell U. Therese research on 'The Transfiguration of Political Imaginary: Nepali Student Activism on the National and Transnational Level,' supervised by Dr. David Hines Holmberg Spreng, Elizabeth Anne Spreng, Elizabeth Anne, U. of Illinois, Urbana, Il - To aid Illinois, Urbana, U. of research on 'Survival by Dialogue: Shifting Languages and Code-Switching in Sorbian Lives,' supervised by Dr. Janet Dixon Keller Sterner, Kirstin Nicole Sterner, Kirstin Nicole, New York U., New York, NY - To aid New York U. research on 'Evolution of the Human Innate Immune Re- sponse,' supervised by Dr. Todd Richard Disotell

Stoetzer, Bettina Yvonne Stoetzer, Bettina Yvonne, U. of California, Santa Cruz, CA - California, Santa Cruz, U. of To aid research on 'At the Edges of the City: An Ethnography of Affective Landscapes and Racial Geographies in Berlin,' supervised by Dr. Lisa Beth Rofel

Styles, Megan Anne Styles, Megan Anne, U. of Washington, Seattle, WA - To aid Washington, U. of research on 'Global Production in a Contested Local Land- scape: The Conflict Surrounding Cut Flower Farming in Kenya,' supervised by Dr. Kalyanakrishnan Sivaramakrish- nan Sunseri, Jun Ueno Sunseri, Jun Ueno, U. of California, Santa Cruz, CA - To aid California, Santa Cruz, U. of research on 'Historic Archaeology of a Spanish Colonial Buffer Settlement in Northern New Mexico,' supervised by Dr. Judith A. Habicht-Mauche

Tallman, Melissa Chris- Tallman, Melissa Christine, City U. of New York, Graduate New York, Graduate Center, tine Center, New York, NY - To aid research on 'Postcranial City U. of Variation in Plio-Pleistocene Hominins of Africa,' supervised by Dr. Eric Delson

Thomas, Samuel Atsushi Thomas, Samuel Atsushi, U. of Oxford, Oxford, UK - To aid Oxford U. research on ''Healing Traditions': The Dynamics of Cultural Difference in the Nexus of Ka'apor-Quilombola Relations, Brazil 24 Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, cont.

Grantee Project Title Institutional Affiliation van Vliet, Netta van Vliet, Netta, Duke U., Durham, NC - To aid research on Duke U. 'Israeli Security Corps: Citizenship, Population, and Milita- rism in Israeli National Identity Formation,' supervised by Dr. Diane Michelle Nelson

Watkins, Tammy Y. Watkins, Tammy Y., U. of Georgia, Athens, GA - To aid re- Georgia, U. of search on 'Children's Subsistence Contributions to Pastoral Households in the Drylands of East Africa,' supervised by Alexandra Avril Brewis

Witeska, Anna Dominika Witeska, Anna Dominika, U. College London, London, UK - College London, U. To aid research on 'Making Political Subjects in Post- Socialist Poland: Memory Workings among 'Veterans' and 'Victims of Oppressions' in Lublin.

Wood, Brian Madison Wood, Brian Madison, Harvard U., Cambridge, MA - To aid Harvard U. research on 'Male Food Production, Transfers, and House- hold Provisioning among Hadza Hunter-Gatherers,' super- vised by Dr. Frank Marlowe

25 2006 Annual Report Post-Ph.D. Research Grants

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Askew, Marc Richard Askew, Dr. Marc Richard, Victoria U., Melbourne, Australia - Victoria U. To aid research on 'Neighborhood in a Time of Danger: Bud- dhist and Muslim Villagers Amidst Thailand's Southern Insur- gency'

Chauhan, Parth Randhir Chauhan, Dr. Parth Randhir, Stone Age Institute, Gosport, IN Stone Age Institute - To aid 'Palaeoanthropological Surveys and GIS Mapping in the Narmada Basin, Central India'

Cords, Marina Cords, Dr. Maria, Columbia U., New York, NY - To aid re- Columbia U. search on 'Collective Action, Kinship, and Reciprocity: Com- munal Territorial Defense in an Old World Monkey'

Cox, Murray Paul Cox, Dr. Murray Paul, U. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ - To aid Arizona, U. of research on 'Determining Prehistoric Interaction Spheres from Commensal Genetics: (Canarium Indicum) in the Solo- mons Archipelago' de Ruiter, Darryl James de Ruiter, Dr. Darryl James, Texas A&M U., College Station, Texas A&M U. TX - To aid research on 'Paleoanthropological Investigation of the Pliocene Virginia Railway Cut, Free State, South Af- rica'

Demeter, Fabrice Demeter, Dr. Fabrice, Musee de l'Homme, Paris, France - To Musee de l'homme aid research on 'Archaeological and Palaeontological Re- search on Upper Mekong River Terraces in Cambodia'

Doane, Molly Ann Doane, Dr. Molly Ann, Marquette U., Milwaukee, WI - To aid Marquette U. research on 'The Cultural Politics of Fair Trade Coffee: Com- modifying Social Justice'

Dominy, Nathaniel Jay Dominy, Dr. Nathaniel Jay, U. of California, Santa Cruz, CA - California, Santa Cruz, U. of To aid research on 'Significance of Plant Underground Stor- age Organs in Human Evolution'

Dussart, Francoise De- Dussart, Dr. Francoise Denise, U. of Connecticut, Storrs, CT Connecticut, U. of nise - To aid research on 'Living with Chronic Illness in Aboriginal Australia'

Emery, Katherine Fran- Emery, Dr. Katherine Frances, Florida Museum of Natural Florida Museum of Natural ces History, Gainesville, FL - To aid research on 'Hunting Cere- History monialism in the Guatemalan Highlands: Applying Ethnoar- chaeology and Zooarchaeology to Commoner Ritual'

Friedman, Sara Lizbeth Friedman, Dr. Sara Lizbeth, Indiana U., Bloomington, IN - To Indiana U., Bloomington aid research on 'Citizenship as Official and Everyday Prac- tice: Chinese Marital Immigrants in Taiwan'

26 Post-Ph.D. Research Grants, cont.

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Golovanova, Lubov Vi- Golovanova, Dr. Lubov V., Laboratory of Prehistory, St. Pe- Laboratory of the Prehistory talievna tersburg, Russia - To aid research on 'Significance of Eco- logical Factors in the Middle to Upper Paleolithic Transition'

Gopher, Abraham Gopher, Dr. Abraham, Tel Aviv U., Tel Aviv, Israel - To aid Tel Aviv U. research on 'Man and Environment in the Middle Pleisto- cene: The Case of Qesem Cave, Israel'

Hanks, Bryan K. Hanks, Dr. Bryan K., U. of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA - To aid Pittsburgh, U. of research on 'A Bioarchaeological Investigation of Middle Bronze Age Production and Social 'Status' in the Southern Urals, Russia' Haws, Jonathan Adam Haws, Dr. Jonathan Adam, U. of Louisville, Louisville, KY - Louisville, U. of To aid research on 'Long-Term Trends in Upper Paleolithic Subsistence at Lapa do Picareiro, Portugal'

Holmes, Douglas Holmes, Dr. Douglas Reginald, State U. of New York, Bing- New York, Binghamton, State Reginald hamton, NY - To aid research on 'Economy of Words: Knowl- U. of edge Production Within the Deutsche Bundesbank and the European Central Bank' Irish, Joel David Irish, Dr. Joel David, U. of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK - To aid Alaska, Fairbanks, U. of research on 'Nubians in Ancient Egypt: Excavation of the C- Group Cemetery at Hierakonpolis'

Jensen-Seaman, Michael Jensen-Seaman, Dr. Michael Ignatius, Duquesne U., Pitts- Duquesne U. Ignatius burgh, PA - To aid research on 'Molecular Evolution of the Primate Relaxin Gene Family'

Komar, Debra Komar, Dr. Debra, U. of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM - To New Mexico, Albuquerque, U. aid research on 'The Use of Material Culture to Establish of Ethnic Identity in International Investigations of Genocide'

Kuppinger, Petra Yvonne Kuppinger, Dr. Petra Yvonne, Monmouth College, Mon- Monmouth College mouth, IL - To aid research on 'Space, Culture, and Islam in Stuttgart, Germany'

Minc, Leah Delia Minc, Dr. Leah Delia, Oregon State U., Corvallis, OR - To aid Oregon State U. research on 'Ceramic Exchange and the Early Zapotec State: Assessing Regional Economic Interaction using Com- positional Analyses' Nadel, Daniel Nadel, Dr. Daniel, U. of Haifa, Haifa, Israel - To aid research Haifa, U. of on 'Natufian Burials and Associated Mortars at Raqefet Cave, Israel: Growing Economic Social Complexity on Threshold of Agriculture' Norton, Heather Lynne Norton, Dr. Heather Lynne, U. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ - To Arizona, U. of aid research on 'Human Pigmentation Candidate Gene Variation and Signatures of Localized Adaptation'

Orta, Andrew Orta, Dr. Andrew, U. of Illinois, Urbana, IL - To aid 'An Eth- Illinois, Urbana, U. of nography of International Business Education'

Panagopoulou, Eleni Panagopoulou, Dr. Eleni, Ephoreia Palaeoanthropology- Ephory of Paleoanthropology- Speleology, Athens, Greece - To aid research on 'Late Pleis- Speleology tocene of the Mani Peninsula, Southern Greece: Paleoan- thropological Investigation' 27 Post-Ph.D. Research Grants, cont.

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Rasmussen, Susan Jane Rasmussen, Dr. Susan Jane, U. of Houston, Houston, TX - Houston, U. of To aid research on 'Performance, Modernity, and Memory in Contemporary Tuareg Theater and Acting in Northern Mali'

Roe, David Roe, Dr. David, James Cook U., Townsville, Australia - To James Cook U. aid research on 'The Archaeology of Colonisation, Continuity and Change in Santa Isabel, Solomon Islands'

Rofel, Lisa Beth Rofel, Dr. Lisa Beth, U. of California, Santa Cruz, CA - To aid California, Santa Cruz, U. of research on 'Made in China, Designed in Italy: The Twenty- First Century Silk Road'

Rook, Lorenzo Rook, Dr. Lorenzo, U. of Florence, Firenze, Italy - To aid Florence, U. of research on 'Khasm El Ghirba (Sudan): An Early to Middle Pleistocene Site Rich in Fossil Vertebrates and Lithic Indus- tries' Saj, Tania Saj, Dr. Tania, McGill U., Montreal, Canada - To aid research McGill U. on 'The Relationship Between Female Energy Balance and Physiological Stress: Implications for Understanding Primate Group Size' Semaw, Sileshi Semaw, Dr. Sileshi, Stone Age Institute, Gosport, IN - To aid Stone Age Institute the 'Gona Palaeoanthropological Research Project'

Shen, Guanjun Shen, Dr. Guanjun, Nanjing Normal U., Nanjing, P.R. China - Nanjing Normal U. To aid research on 'A1/Be Burial Dating of Peking Man Site at Zhoukoudian China'

Shepherd, Christopher Shepherd, Christopher John, RMIT U., Melbourne, Australia RMIT University John - To aid research on 'Agricultural Biodiversity and the Politics of In Situ Conservation Programs in the Peruvian Andes'

Sokefeld, Martin Sokefeld, Dr. Martin, U. of Bern, Bern, Switzerland - To aid Berne, U. of research on 'Kashmiri Diaspora and the Kashmir Dispute'

Susino, George James Susino, George James, U. of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Witwatersrand, U. of South Africa - To aid research on 'Optical Dating of Quartz Microdebitage from Archaeological Deposits of Sibudu Cave, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa' Swanepoel, Natalie Jo- Swanepoel, Dr. Natalie Josephine, U. of Pretoria, Pretoria, Pretoria, U. of sephine South Africa - To aid research on 'A Regional Archaeology of Trade, Warfare, and Big Men in Pre-Colonial Northern Ghana' Swenson, Edward R. Swenson, Dr. Edward R., U. of Chicago, Chicago, IL - To aid Chicago, U. of research on 'Ritual, Household, and the Politics of Space in Canoncillio, Peru'

Tejedor, Marcelo Fabian Tejedor, Dr. Marcelo Fabian, U. Nacional de la Patagonia, Patagonia, National U. of Esquel, Argentina - To aid 'Fossil Primates From Patagonia: A Study of Cebine-Hominin Parallel Evolution'

Vitzthum, Virginia Judith Vitzthum, Dr. Virginia Judith, State U. of New York, Bingham- Inst. of Primary and Preventa- ton, NY - To aid research on 'Testing Hypotheses of the Die- tive Health Care tary Determinants of Ovarian Hormones: A Comparative Study of Three Populations' 28 Post-Ph.D. Research Grants, cont.

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Vokes, Richard Philip Vokes, Dr. Richard Philip, U. of Canterbury, Christchurch, Canterbury, U. of New Zealand - To aid research on 'The 'Globalization' of Religion: Pentecostal-Charismatic Christianity in South- Western Uganda and Beyond' Wilmsen, Edwin Norman Wilmsen, Dr. Edwin Norman, U. of Edinburgh, Scotland - To Edinburgh, U. of aid research on 'Precolonial Botswana Social Formations: Optical Petrography of Pottery and Clays Linking Peoples, Pots, and Places'

Woolard, Kathryn Ann Woolard, Dr. Kathryn Ann, U. of California, San Diego, La California, San Diego, U. of Jolla, CA - To aid 'A Longitudinal Study of Language Ideol- ogy, Policy, and Practices in Bilingual Barcelona'

Yanagisako, Sylvia Yanagisako, Dr. Sylvia Junko, Stanford U., Stanford, CA - To Stanford U. Junko aid research on 'Made in Translation: Italian Family Firms in China'

29 2006 Annual Report Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Asmussen, Brit Jo-anne Asmussen, Dr. Brit Jo-anne, The Australian National U., Australian National U. Canberra, Australia - To aid research and writing on 'Dangerous Harvest Revisited: Taphonomy, Economic Inten- sification, & High Level Models: A View from Australia' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellowship Belmaker, Miriam Belmaker, Dr. Miriam, Harvard U., Cambridge, MA - To aid Harvard U. research and writing on 'The Paleoecology of 'Ubeidya (Israel) and its Implications for Early Hominin Dispersal Events' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellowship

Darling, Eliza Jane Darling, Dr. Eliza Jane, Independent Scholar, Bristol, UK- To aid research and writing on 'The Sheltering Grove: The Gen- trification of Adirondack Nature' - Richard Carley Hunt Fel- lowship

Ntarangwi, Mwenda Ntarangwi, Dr. Mwenda, Augustana College, Rock Island, IL Augustana College - To aid research and writing on 'Reversed Gaze: An African Encounters America Through Anthropology' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellowship

Petryna, Adriana Petryna, Dr. Adriana, The New School U., New York, NY - New School U. To aid research and writing on 'Pharmaceutical Testing and Evidence Making: An Ethnography of the Globalized Clinical Trial' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellowship

Shah, Alpa Shah, Dr. Alpa, Goldsmiths College, London, UK - To aid Goldsmiths College research and writing on 'In the Shadows of the State: Indige- nous Politics in Jharkhand, India' - Richard Carley Hunt Fel- lowship

Sodikoff, Genese Marie Sodikoff, Dr. Genese Marie, Rutgers U., Newark, NJ - To aid Rutgers U. research and writing on 'Reserve Labor: A Moral Ecology of Conservation in Madagascar' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellow- ship

Theidon, Kimberly Susan Theidon, Dr. Kimberly Susan, Harvard U., Cambridge, MA - Harvard U. To aid research and writing on 'Intimate Enemies: Violence and Reconciliation in Peru' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellowship

Zent, Eglee Lopez Zent, Dr. Eglee Lopez, Instituto Venezolano de Investiga- Instituto Venezolano de Investi- ciones Cientificas, Caracas, Venezuela - To aid research gaciones Cientificas and writing on 'Choosing to be Hunter-Gatherers: Hoti Eco- logical Ethos and Praxis' - Richard Carley Hunt Fellowship

30 2006 Annual Report Conference and Workshop Grants

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Alexiu, Teodor Mircea Alexiu, Dr. Teodor Mircea, West U. of Timisoara, Timisoara, West U. of Timisoara Romania - To aid conference on 'Region, Regional Identity and Regionalism in Southeastern Europe,' 2007, Timisoara, in collaboration with Dr. Ulf Brunnbauer

Bain, Allison Lynn Bain, Dr. Allison, U. Laval, Quebec, QC, Canada - To aid Laval, Quebec, U. of conference on 'The View from Here: History and Ecology of the North Atlantic Region,' 2006, U. Laval, in collaboration with Dr. James Woollett

Bird, Elizabeth Bird, Dr. Elizabeth, U. of South Florida, Tampa, FL - To aid South Florida, U. of conference of SfAA on 'Global Insecurities, Global Solutions, and Applied Anthropology,' 2007, Tampa

Bodzsar, Eva B. Bodzsar, Dr. Eva, Eotvos Lorand U., Budapest, Hungary - To Eotvos Lorand U. aid 15th congress of European Anthropological Association (EAA) on 'Man and Environment: Trends and Challenges in Anthropology,' 2006, Eotvos Lorand U.

Cameron, Catherine Cameron, Dr. Catherine Margaret, U. Colorado, Boulder, CO Colorado, Boulder, U. of Margaret - To aid conference on 'Invisible Citizens: Slavery in Ancient Pre-state Societies,' 2006, Snowbird, Utah

Cunha, Manuela Ivone Cunha, Manuela Ivone, U. do Minho, Braga, Portugal - To Minho, U. of aid conference on 'Ethnografest III: Ethnography and the Public Sphere,' 2007, ISCTE, Lisbon, in collaboration with Dr. Maria Antonia Lima

Dobrzanska, Halina Dobrzanksa, Dr. Halina, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kra- Polish Academy of Sciences kow, Poland - To aid 12th annual meeting of the European Association of Archaeologists (EAA), 2006, Institute of Ar- chaeology and Ethnology, Krakow, in association with Dr. Anthony Harding Domanska, Lucyna Domanska, Dr. Lucyna, U. of Lodz, Lodz, Poland - To aid U. of Lodz conference on 'Archaeological Invisibility and Forgotten Knowledge,' 2007, U. of Lodz, in collaboration with Dr. Ole Gron and Dr. Karen Hardy

Fernald, Theodore B. Fernald, Dr. Theodore Barker, Swarthmore College, Swarth- Swarthmore College more, PA - To aid conference on 'Athabaskan Languages,' 2007, Window Rock, AZ

Grine, Frederick E. Grine, Dr. Frederick, State U. of New York, Stony Brook, NY New York, Stony Brook, State - To aid conference on 'What Is Homo? The origin of our U. of genus,' 2006, Stony Brook, in collaboration with Dr. Richard Leakey

Jillani, Ngalla Edward Jillani, Mr. Ngalla Edward, National Museums of Kenya, Nai- National Museums of Kenya robi, Kenya - To aid conference on 'Towards Understanding Palaeoenvironment during the First 'Out of Africa,' ' 2006, National Museums, in collaboration with Dr. Fredrick Kyala Manthi

31 Conference and Workshop Grants, cont. Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Libal, Kathryn Libal, Dr. Kathryn, U. of Connecticut, Storrs, CT - To aid Connecticut, U. of conference at AAA on 'Debating Anthropological Practice and National Security,' 2007, San Jose, in collaboration with Dr. Laura Graham

Lonsdorf, Elizabeth Vin- Lonsdorf, Dr. Elizabeth V., Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, IL - Chicago, U. of son To aid conference on 'The mind of the chimpanzee,' 2007, Lincoln Park Zoo, in collaboration with Stephen R. Ross

Marquez Belloni, Marquez Belloni, Dr. Francisca, U. Academia Humanismo U. Academia de Humanismo Francisca Cristiano, Santiago, Chile - To aid VI Congreso Chileno de Cristiano Antropologia: 'Las miradas del sur,' 2007, U. Austral de Chile, Valdivia, in collaboration with Dr. Roberto Morales Urra

Martinsson-Wallin, Martinsson-Wallin, Dr. Helene, Gotland U., Visby, Sweden - Gotland U. Helene To aid 7th international conference on 'Easter Island and the Pacific: Migration, Cultural Heritage and Identity,' 2007, Got- land U.

Masters, Judith Char- Masters, Dr. Judith Charmaine, Natal Museum, Pietermaritz- Natal, U. of maine burg, South Africa - To aid conference on 'Prosimians 2007: biology, conservation, diversity and evolution,' Ithala Game Reserve, KwaZulu-Natal, in collaboration with Carol Scheep- ers

O'Neill, Colleen O'Neill, Dr. Colleen M., Utah State U., Logan, UT - To aid Utah State U. conference on 'Indians, Labor, and Capitalist Culture: A col- loquium of historians, ethnohistorians and anthropologists,' 2006, Newberry Library, in collaboration with Dr. Brian C. Hosmer Pina Cabral, Joao de Pina Cabral, Dr. Joao de, U. of Lisbon, Lisbon, Portugal - To Lisbon, U. of aid conference on 'An Epistemology for Anthropology,' 2007, U. of Lisbon, in collaboration with Dr. Christina Toren

Raulin, Anne Raulin, Dr. Anne, U. of Paris X, Nanterre, France - To aid Paris 10-Nanterre, U. of conference on 'Parallaxes: Anthropologies of the Western World for the 21st Century,' 2007, NYU in Paris, in collabora- tion with Dr. Susan C. Rogers

Selwyn, Christopher Selwyn, Dr. Christopher Thomas, London Metropolitan U., London Metropolitan U. Thomas London, United Kingdom - To aid conference on 'Thinking Through Tourism,' 2007, London Metropolitan U., in collabo- ration with Dr. Julie Scott

Shankland, David Shankland, Dr. David, U. of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom - Bristol, U. of To aid conference on 'Heritage, Archaeology, and Anthropol- ogy in the Balkans and Anatolia,' 2006, U. of Wales- Gregynog

Sierra, Maria Teresa Sierra, Dr. Maria Teresa, CIESAS, Mexico, D.F., Mexico - To CIESAS aid 5th congress of the Latin American network on legal an- thropology: 'Justice and Diversity,' 2006, Cuernavaca, Mex- ico, in collaboration with Dr. Maria Victoria Chenaut

Spiegel, Andrew D. Spiegel, Dr. Andrew, U. Cape Town, Cape Town, South Cape Town, U. of Africa - To aid conference of PAAA and ASnA on 'Transcending Postcolonial Conditions: Towards alternative modernities,' 2006, U. Cape Town, in collaboration with Dr. Fiona Ross

32 Conference and Workshop Grants, cont. Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Strang, Veronica Jane Strang, Dr. Veronica Jane, U. of Auckland, Auckland, NZ - Auckland U. To aid joint conference of ASA UK, New Zealand, and Aus- tralia on 'Ownership and Appropriation,' 2008, U. Auckland, in collaboration with Dr. Mark Busse

Theodossopoulos, Dimit- Theodossopoulos, Dr. Dimitrios, U. Bristol, Bristol, United Bristol, U. of rios Kingdom - To aid EASA conference on 'Europe and the World,' 2006, U. of Bristol, in collaboration with Dr. Dorle Drackle

Waterson, Roxana Waterson, Dr. Roxana, National U. of Singapore - To aid National U. of Singapore conference on 'Asia-Pacific Childhoods: New concepts and networks for Asia-Pacific child researchers,' 2006, National U., in collaboration with Dr. Brenda Yeoh Saw Ai

Westaway, Michael C. Westaway, Michael C., Willandra Lakes World Heritage Willandra Lakes World Heri- Area, Buronga, Australia - To aid conference on 'The World tage Area Heritage of Human Origins,' 2007, Willandra Lakes, Austra- lia, in collaboration with Gary Pappin

33 2006 Annual Report International Collaborative Research Grants

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Blumenschine, Robert Blumenschine, Dr. Robert J., Rutgers U., New Brunswick, Rutgers U. John NJ; and Maso, Dr. Fidelis T., Open U., Dar es Salaam, Tan- zania - To aid collaborative research on 'Oldowan Hominin Land Use in the Post-Volcanic Lowermost Bed II Eastern Olduvai Basin, Tanzania' Buikstra, Jane E. Buikstra, Dr. Jane, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ; and Arizona State U. Dr. Vera Tiesler, U. Autonoma de Yucatan, Yucatan, Mexico - To aid collaborative research on age and dynasty in ancient Maya society

Di Rienzo, Anna Di Rienzo, Dr. Anna, U. of Chicago, Chicago, IL; and Dr. Chicago, U. of Rem Sukernik, Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, Russia - To aid collaborative research on adaptive evolution of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA loci in circumpolar popula- tions of Siberia Garcea, Elena Antonella Garcea, Dr. Elena, U. di Cassino, Cassino, Italy; and Dr. Cassino, U. of Abdulaye Maga, IRSH/UAM, Niamey, Niger - To aid collabo- rative research on Early and Middle Holocene adaptations across the Sahara-Sahel border

Henshilwood, Christo- Henshilwood, Dr. Christopher, U. of Bergen, Bergen, Nor- Bergen, U. of pher S. way; and Dr. Francesco d'Errico, U. de Bordeaux 1, Talence, France - To aid collaborative research on use of Nassarius kraussianus shells as ornamentation in southern Africa Mid- dle Stone Age Lemorini, Cristina Lemorini, Dr. Cristina, U. di Roma 'La Sapienza', Rome, Italy Rome, U. of & Skakun, Dr. Natalia, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia - To aid 'Developing a FTIR Spectra Collection for Interpreting Residues of the Prehistoric Activi- ties' Shevchenko, Olga Shevchenko, Dr. Olga, Williams College, Williamstown, MA; Williams College and Sarkisova, Oksana, Moscow State U., Moscow, Russia - To aid collaborative research on ' Snapshot Histories: Family Photography and Generational Memory of Russia's Socialist Century' Torrence, Robin Torrence, Dr. Robin, Australian Museum, Sydney, Australia; National Museum of Australia and Kluyev, Dr. Nikolay A., Russian Academy of Science, Vladivostok, Russia - To aid collaborative research on ''Pleistocene Origins of Long Distance Obsidian Exchange in Far Eastern Russia

34 2006 Annual Report Wadsworth International Fellowships

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Amugongo, Sarah Amugongo, Sarah, U. of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya - To aid Nairobi, U. of Kigamwa study in physical anthropology at U. of California, Berkeley, CA, supervised by Dr. Leslea Hlusko

Barragan, Carlos Andres Barragan, Carlos, U. del Cauca, Cauca, Colombia - To aid Cauca U. study in sociocultural anthropology at U. California, Davis, CA, supervised by Dr. Benjamin Orlove

Bushozi, Pastory M. Bushozi, Pastory, U. of Dar es Salaam, Dar es Salaam, Alberta, U. of Tanzania - To aid training in archaeology at U. Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada, supervised by Dr. Pamela Willoughby

Chirchir, Habiba Chirchir, Habiba, U. of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya - To aid study Nairobi, U. of in biological anthropology at New York U., NY, NY, supervised by Dr. Susan Anton

De Silva, Premakumara De Silva, Premakumara, U. of Colombo, Colombo, Sri Lanka Colombo, U. of - To aid support of workshop and seminar and purchase of books, computers and software

Debretsion, Amaha Debretsion, Amaha Segid, U. of Asmara, Asmara, Eritrea - Asmara, U. of Segid To aid training in biological anthropology at Southern Illinois U., Carbondale, IL, supervised by Dr. Robert Corruccini

Dlamini, Gabby Sipho Dlamini, Gabby S., U. of Witwatersrand, Wits, South Africa - Witwatersrand, U. of To aid study in social anthropology at U. Wits, supervised by Dr. David Coplan

Ghebregiorgis, Merih W. Ghebregiorgis, Merih W., National Museum of Eritrea, Asmara, U. of Asmara, Eritrea - To aid study in archaeology at U. of Florida, Gainesville, FL, supervised by Dr. Peter Schmidt

Ghebregiorgis, Merih W. Ghebregiorgis, Merih, National Museum of Eritrea, Asmara, Florida, U. of Eritrea - To aid training in archaeology at U. Florida, Gainesville, FL, supervised by Dr. Peter Schmidt

Hu, Gang Hu, Gang, Instit. of Wildlife, Kunming, P.R. China - To aid Kunming Institute of Zoology study in biological anthropology at Australian National U., Canberra, ACT, supervised by Dr. Colin Groves

Kostepen, Enis Kostepen, Enis, Bogazici U., Istanbul, Turkey - To aid Bogazici U. training in cultural anthropology at New School, New York, NY, supervised by Dr. Hylton White

35 Wadsworth International Fellowships, cont.

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Legoas, Jorge Legoas, Jorge, Colegio Andino, Cusco, Peru - To aid training Colegio Andino in cultural anthropology at Laval U., Montreal, Canada, supervised by Dr. Marie Couillard

Loaiza Diaz, Nicolas Loaiza, Nicolas, Medellin, Colombia - To aid training in Antioquia, U. of archaeology at Temple U., Philadelphia, PA, supervised by Dr. Anthony Ranere

Modikwa, Baatlhodi Modikwa, Baatlhodi, Gaborone, Botswana - To aid study in Witwatersrand, U. of archaeology at U. of Witwatersrand, Wits, South Africa, supervised by Dr. Karim Sadr

Mokokwe, Winnie Dipuo Mokokwe, Winnie, U. of Witwatersrand, Wits, South Africa - Witwatersrand, U. of To aid study in archaeology at U. Wits, Wits, South Africa, supervised by Dr. Kathy Kuman

Motloung, Alitta N. Motloung, Alitta, U. of Witwatersrand, Wits, South Africa -- to Witwatersrand, U. of aid training in archaeology at U. Wits, supervised by Dr. Karim Sadr

Ndiema, Emmanuel K. Ndiema, Emmanuel, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Rutgers U. Kenya - To aid training in archaeology at Rutgers U., New Brunswick, NJ, supervised by Dr. J.W.K. Harris

Njau, Jackson Kundasai Njau, Jackson, National History Museum, Arusha, Tanzania - National History Museums To aid purchase of computer, digital camera, supplies, and material for casting - P-FDG

Onjala, Isaya O. Onjala, Isaya, National Museum of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya - National Museums of Kenya To buy books & subscriptions and to aid in living expenses at U. Alberta

Paberzyte, Ieva Paberzyte, Ieva, Vilnius U., Vilnius, Lithuania -- to aid study in archaeology at McGillU., Montreal, Canada, supervised by Dr. Andre Costopoulos

Patino Contreras, Patino, Alejandro, Instituto Colombiano de Arqueologia e Inst. Colombiana de Antro. e Alejandro Historia, Bogota Colombia - To aid study in archaeology at Hist. U. of Calgary, Calgary, CA, supervised by Dr. Kathryn Reese-Taylor

Pietersen, Keith Angelo Pietersen, Keith A., University of Witwatersrand, Wits, South Witwatersrand, U. of Africa - To aid study in social anthropology at U. of Witwatersrand, supevised by Dr. David Coplan

Sadikov, Mirkomil Sadikov, Mirkomil, Academy of Sciences, Tashkent, Academy of Sciences Uzbekistan - To aid Library Residency at Stockholm U., Stockholm, Sweden, supervised by Dr. Gudrun Dahl

Sealy, Judith C. University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa - To Cape Town, U. of support training in archaeology at U. of Cape Town for black southern Africans, supervised by Dr. Judith Sealy

36 Wadsworth International Fellowships, cont.

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation

Szmagalska, Karolina Szmagalska, Karolina, Warsaw U., Warsaw, Poland - To aid Warsaw U. training in cultural anthropology at New School, New York, NY, supervised by Dr. Adriana Petryna

Yang, Jianping Yang, Jianping, Beijing Language & Culture U., Beijing, PR Beijing Language and Culture China - To support training in cultural anthropology at Texas U. A&M U., College Station, TX, supervised by Dr. Cynthia Werner

37 2006 Annual Report Initiatives

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Jungers, William L. Jungers, Dr. William L., State U. of New York, Stony Brook, New York, Stony Brook, State NY - To aid 'Conservation and Preservation of the Homo U. of floresiensis Skeletal Remains from Indonesia - Initiatives Grant

38 2006 Annual Report Historical Archives Program

Grantees Project Title Institutional Affiliation Brown, Clayton D. Brown, Clayton D., U. of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA - To aid Pittsburgh, U. of oral-history interviews with eight Chinese ethnologists and archaeologists on 'Defining the Self.'

Harwood, Alan Harwood, Dr. Alan, U. of Massachusetts, Boston, MA - To Massachusetts, Boston, U. of aid preparation of personal research materials for archival deposit with the National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institute, Washington, DC

Horne, Lee C. Horne, Dr. Lee C., U. of Pennsylvania Museum, Pennsylvania, U. of Philadelphia, PA - To aid preparation of the personal research materials of Carol Kramer for archival deposit with the National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institute, Washington, DC Leopold, Robert S. Leopold, Dr. Robert, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Inst., Washington, Suitland, MD - To aid final accession of the personal DC research materials of Dr. Alan Harwood and Dr. Carol Kramer -- Historical Archives Program Accession Supplement Mathien, Frances Joan Mathien, Dr. Frances Joan, Albuquerque, NM - To aid oral- New Mexico, Albuquerque, U. history interviews of Chaco Canyon Research Projects of

Mikhaylova, Vera T. Mikhalova, Vera, Ulan-Ude, Russia - To aid preparation of Historical Museum of Buryatia the personal research materials of Taras Mikhaylov on Siberian Shamanism for archival deposit with the Historical Museum of Buryatia, Ulan-Ude, Russia

Rothschild, Nan A. Rothschild, Dr. Nan A., New York, NY - To aid preparation of Columbia U. research materials and professional papers of Ruth Leah Bunzel for archival deposit with the National Anthropological Archives, Suitland, MD Sirbu, Corina Sirbu, Corina, Cluj-Napoca, Romania - To aid oral-history Centre National de la interviews on 'the practice of ethnography under Communist Recherche Scientifique rule: the Romanian Case.'

39 2006 Annual Report Grantmaking Statistics

Provided below are descriptive statistical reports of 2006 success rates and historical trends for applications to the Wenner-Gren Foundation's Dissertation Fieldwork Grants, Post-Ph.D. Research Grants, and Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowships programs.

Success Rates for Major Grant Programs

40 Grantmaking Statistics: Historical Trends of Success Rates for Major Grant Programs

41 Grantmaking Statistics: Success Rates for Sub-Disciplines

42 Grantmaking Statistics: Historical Success Rates by Sub-Discipline

43 Grantmaking Statistics: Historical Success Rates by Sub-Discipline, cont.

44 Grantmaking Statistics: Historical Trends of Success Rates by Gender

45 Grantmaking Statistics: Historical Trends of Success Rates by Citizenship

46 Grantmaking Statistics: Historical Trends of Success Rates by Residence

47 2005 Annual Report Financial Statements

48 Financial Statements, cont.

49 Financial Statements, cont.

50 Financial Statements, cont.

51 Financial Statements, cont.

52 Financial Statements, cont.

53 Financial Statements, cont.

54 Financial Statements, cont.

55 Financial Statements, cont.

56 Financial Statements, cont.

57 2006 Annual Report Foundation Leadership

WENNER-GREN FOUNDATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Leslie C. Aiello (2005)* David Alexander (1995) Beverley Chase (1991) William L. Cobb, Jr. (2000) Joan Girgus (2002) Richard C. Hackney, Jr. (1992) John Immerwahr (2004) Darcy Kelley (2005) Ruth Kennedy Sudduth (1998) Seth J. Masters (2000) Ellen Mickiewicz (2000) David Patterson (1994) William B. Petersen (2001) Lorraine Sciarra (2004) Deborah Wadsworth (2006) Frank W. Wadsworth (1970)

OFFICERS

Richard C. Hackney, Jr. Chairman Seth J. Masters Vice-Chairman, Treasurer Leslie C. Aiello President, Secretary Maugha Kenny Assistant Secretary

ADVISORY COUNCIL

Marcus Banks (2003) Richard Bauman (2004) Susana Narotzky (2006) Paul Lane (2006) Ricardo Santos (2004) Karen Strier (2003)

LEGAL COUNSEL

Debevoise & Plimpton

ACCOUNTANTS

Owen J. Flanagan & Company

*(numbers in parenthesis represent the year the term of service began)

58 2006 Annual Report Reviewers (during 2006)

Asif Agha University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA Philippe I. Bourgois University of California, San Francisco, CA Charles L. Briggs University of California, Berkeley, CA Molly Doane Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI Leslie K. Dwyer Haverford College, Haverford, PA Deborah Elliston Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY Julia Elyachar Mastnak New York University, New York, NY Sue Estroff University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC Ilana Feldman New York University, New York, NY Susan D. Gillespie University of Florida, Gainesville, FL Michael Gilsenan New York University, New York, NY Douglas Glick Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY Penelope Harvey University of Manchester, United Kingdom Michael F. Herzfeld Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Judith T. Irvine University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI Trenholme Junghans The Graduate Center, City University, New York, NY Robert L. Kelly University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY Keith W. Kintigh Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ Judith Kreid Wenner-Gren Foundation Brian Larkin Barnard College, New York City Kevin Latham SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom Phyllia C. Lee University of Stirling, Scotland, United Kingdom Lousie D. Lennihan The Graduate Center, City University, New York, NY Jeff Maskovsky Queens College, City University, New York, NY Michael Muse Wenner-Gren Foundation Akos Ostor Wesleyan College, Middletown, CT. Richard J. Pearson University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada Charlotte Ann Roberts Durham University, United Kingdom Chris Robinson Bronx Community College, City University, New York, NY Fernando Santos-Granero Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama Daniel W. Sellen University of Toronto, Canada Jesse Shipley Bard College, Annandale-On-Hudson, NY John D. Speth University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI Ann B. Stahl Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY Lynn Marie Stephen University of Oregon, Eugene, OR Michael Sinclair Stewart University College London, United Kingdom Maila Stivens University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Verena Stolcke Universidad Autonoma, Barcelona, Spain Mark Stoneking Max-Planck Institute, Leipzig, Germany Wen-Ching Sung University of Toronto, Canada Robert Wald Sussman Washington University, St. Louis, MO Mark Thomas University College London, United Kingdom Sandy Toussaint The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Australia Stanley J. Ulijaszek University of Oxford, United Kingdom Peter van der Veer University College, Utrecht University Berrnard Wood George Washington University, Washington D.C.

59 2006 Annual Report Staff

Leslie C. Aiello President Natasha Fenelon Applications Program Assistant Maritza Figueroa Accountant Maugha Kenny Chief Administrative Officer and Director of Finance Judith Kreid International Programs Administrator Carmelita Mitchell Applications Program Administrator Mark Mahoney Resources Coordinator Victoria Malkin Information Coordinator Mary Elizabeth Moss Grants Curator Michael Muse International Programs Administrator Laurie Obbink Conference Program Associate Amy Perlow Information Assistant Elizabeth Rojas Applications Program Assistant Pamela Smith International Programs Administrator Abbey Todras Information Assistant

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