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This archived information is dated to the 2010-11 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
This archived information is dated to the 2010-11 academic year only and may no longer be current.
For currently applicable policies and information, see the current Stanford Bulletin.
Emeriti: (Professors) Clifford R. Barnett, Harumi Befu, George A. Collier, Jane F. Collier, Carol Delaney, Charles O. Frake, James L. Gibbs, Jr., Renato I. Rosaldo, George D. Spindler, Robert B. Textor
Chair: Sylvia Yanagisako
Professors: Lisa Curran, William H. Durham, James Ferguson (on leave), Thomas Blom Hansen, Ian Hodder, Richard G. Klein, Tanya Luhrmann, Lynn Meskell, Sylvia J. Yanagisako
Associate Professors: Rebecca Bliege Bird, Paulla Ebron, James A. Fox, Miyako Inoue, Sarah Lochlann Jain, James Holland Jones, Matthew Kohrman, Liisa Malkki, John W. Rick, Barbara Voss
Assistant Professors: Melissa J. Brown, Ian G. Robertson, Michael V. Wilcox
Assistant Professor (Research): Douglas W. Bird
Courtesy Professors: Penelope Eckert, Raymond McDermott
Visiting Associate Professors: Ewa Domanska, Jean-Jacques Hublin, Mark Maguire
Lecturers: Kathleen Coll, Claudia Engel, Karen Holmberg, Matthew Jobin, Alma Kunanbaeva, Sandra Lee, Merritt Ruhlen, Dan Salkeld, James Truncer
Affiliated Faculty: Carol Boggs, J. Gordon Brotherston, Susan Cashion, Jean-Pierre Dupuy, Marcus W. Feldman, John A. Gosling, Robert Sapolsky, Jeffrey T. Schnapp, Bernardo Subercaseaux
Post Doctoral Fellows: Ayca Alemdaroglu, Carter Hunt
Teaching Affiliates: Elif Babul, Serena Love, Erin Pettigrew, Angel Roque, Robert Samet, Joshua Samuels, Bryn Williams, Austin Zeiderman
Department Offices: Building 50, Main Quadrangle, 450 Serra Mall
Mail Code: 94305-2034
Phone: (650) 723-3421
Email: anthropology@stanford.edu
Web Site: http://anthropology.stanford.edu
Courses offered by the Department of Anthropology are listed under the subject code ANTHRO on the Stanford Bulletin's ExploreCourses web site.
The courses offered by the Department of Anthropology are designed to: provide undergraduates with instruction in anthropology; provide undergraduate majors in Anthropology with a program of work leading to the bachelor's degree; and prepare graduate candidates for advanced degrees in Anthropology. Anthropology is devoted to the study of human beings and human societies as they exist across time and space. It is distinct from other social sciences in that it gives central attention to the full time span of human history, and to the full range of human societies and cultures, including those located in historically marginalized parts of the world. It is therefore especially attuned to questions of social, cultural, and biological diversity, to issues of power, identity, and inequality, and to understanding the dynamic processes of social, historical, ecological, and biological change over time. Education in Anthropology provides excellent preparation for living in a multicultural and globally-interconnected world, and helps to equip students for careers in fields including law, medicine, business, public service, research, ecological sustainability, and resource management. Students may pursue degrees in Anthropology at the bachelor's, master's, and doctoral levels.
The Department of Anthropology offers a wide range of approaches to the topics and area studies within the field, including archaeology, ecology, environmental anthropology, evolution, linguistics, medical anthropology, political economy, science and technology studies, and sociocultural anthropology. Methodologies for the study of micro- and macro-social processes are taught through the use of qualitative and quantitative approaches. The department provides students with excellent training in theory and methods to enable them to pursue graduate study in any of the above mentioned subfields of Anthropology.
The department expects undergraduate majors in the program to be able to demonstrate the following learning outcomes. These learning outcomes are used in evaluating students and the department's undergraduate program. Students are expected to demonstrate:
In addition to gaining an excellent foundation for graduate research and study, students majoring in Anthropology can pursue careers in government, international business, international development agencies, international education, law, mass media, nonprofit organizations, and public policy.
Graduate training in Anthropology at Stanford is designed for students who seek the Doctoral (Ph.D.) degree, and for students who seek the Masters of Arts (M.A.) degree only. Entering graduate students need not have majored in Anthropology as undergraduates, although most have backgrounds in behavioral, biological, social, or physical sciences.
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