Professor of Anthropology
Tag Archives: Central African Republic
Melissa Remis and Carolyn Jost Robinson publish new article in American Anthropologist
“Elephants, Hunters, and Others: Integrating Biological Anthropology and Multispecies Ethnography in a Conservation Zone” has just appeared in the September 2020 issue of American Anthropologist. The paper follows multispecies interactions along networks of elephant trails in the Central African Republic … Continue reading
Carolyn Jost Robinson presents research at IPS/ASP Meeting
Carolyn Jost Robinson presents at the 2016 Joint Meeting of the International Primatological Society and the American Society of Primatologists in Chicago, IL. Her talk entitled “Becoming in Ethnoprimatology: Multispecies Ethnography at the Human-Primate Interface” describes ongoing multidisciplinary research she and … Continue reading
Melissa Remis and Carolyn Jost Robinson publish paper on BaAka women’s health in American Journal of Human Biology
Please follow the link below to see Carolyn Jost Robinson’s and Melissa Remis’ paper BaAka women’s health and subsistence practices in transitional conservation economies: Variation with age, household size, and food security, published in the American Journal of Human Biology. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.22817
Central African Republic Hotspot Feature in Cultural Anthropology Journal
Rebecca Hardin, Melissa Remis and Carolyn Jost Robinson recently published a feature article “From Abundance to Acute marginality-farms-arms-and forests-in the Central African Republic” in the online Cultural Anthropology Journal on the current conflict situation in the Central African Republic and … Continue reading