MIT Department of Anthropology

News Archive

MIT Anthropology

News Archive

Gender in Engineering: A Tough Calculation

June 1, 2012

Why don't more women enter the male-dominated profession of engineering? Some observers have speculated it may be due to the difficulties of balancing a demanding career with family life. Others have suggested that women may not rate their own technical skills highly enough. However, a recent paper co-authored by MIT social scientist Susan Silbey, based on a four-year study of engineering students at four schools, offers a different story.

Political Economies of Trauma and Compassion

May 1, 2012

Professor Erica James's research examines how individuals, organizations, and states contain and redress psychosocial trauma by means of economies of compassion. Compassion economies include charity, corporate philanthropy, humanitarian and development aid circulating within and across territorial and other socio-political borders.

Exit 0: The long-term impacts of deindustrialization in Southeast Chicago

April 1, 2012

Exit Zero refers to the highway exit ramp number for the former steel mill neighborhoods of Southeast Chicago in the Calumet region, once one of the largest steel-producing areas in the world. Exit Zero is also the name of a book written by anthropologist Christine Walley, who grew up in the region as a fourth generation member of a steelworking family, as well as a documentary film made by Chris Boebel and Chris Walley.

James receives $25,000 Levitan Prize in the Humanities

March 19, 2012

Deborah K. Fitzgerald, the Kenan Sahin Dean of the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, has announced that Erica Caple James, associate professor of anthropology, has received the James A. ('45) and Ruth Levitan Prize in the Humanities. The $25,000 prize is awarded annually as a research fund to support innovative and creative scholarship in the humanities.

David Harvey addresses financial crisis

March 4, 2011

Invited by the MIT Anthropology program, David Harvey, author of The Condition of Postmodernity and professor in the Program in Anthropology at the City University of New York, examines the latest financial crisis and the complexities of global capital flow from a Marxist perspective.

Erica James featured in Harvard Gazette

October 1, 2010

Erica James spends the year as a Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced study, writing an ethnographic account of the relationship between state governance and faith-based charitable organizations in Haiti.

James Howe's course featured by MIT News

April 27, 2010

Students in James Howe's course, Monitoring the Rights of Native Peoples, submit a five-page report on the Kuna people of Panama for the Universal Periodic Review (UPR), the United Nations' process for reviewing human rights practices around the world.