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  1. Retweeted
    Dec 20

    A favorite moment from a student paper today: a Durkheimian re-interpetation of "peer pressure" as a form of collective effervescence...

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  2. Retweeted

    What is needed is a much more comprehensive approach. Ph.D.s with nonacademic careers should have a seat at the table as universities and departments rethink graduate education.

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  3. Retweeted
    Dec 19

    Toxic treatment pathways and limited care discourage minority young adults from continuing treatment for first-episode .

    Branches in a head
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  4. Retweeted
    Dec 19

    A recent article by my team funded by and Hogg Foundation on toxic pathways to care for early for racial and ethnic minorities in

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  5. Retweeted
    Dec 18

    The eras of sociologists and economists as the famous public intellectuals no doubt left a lot to be desired, but boy o boy does this era of the dominance of psychologists have a LOT to answer for.

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  6. Dec 18

    "Now we had something to believe in". Amazing story of families searching for a cure for a rare genetic disease, complete with powerful & moving video from

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  7. Retweeted
    Dec 14

    A perfect ethnography for use in cultural anthropology, medical, African studies, and religion classes. And priced at $19.95. The paperback version of Spirit Children: Illness, Poverty, and Infanticide in Northern Ghana will be available this July

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  8. Retweeted
    Dec 3

    A quick google search of the theory of change reveals a smattering of diagrams, flow charts, arrows and coloured boxes. Does the theory of change always have to be this difficult? See how Makerble can simplify the process

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  9. Retweeted
    Dec 12

    And we finished with this awesome clip of : "[Students can engage in bioanthro] *and* have their soul. They're not selling out." This hit home for my students, many of whom are 1st gen, BIPOC, and women who want to pursue careers in bioanth

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  10. Retweeted
    Dec 12

    We watched talk about , Rising Star Cave, and the coolness of live-streaming 'science' in real time (especially to gradeschool kids):

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  11. Retweeted
    Dec 12

    In yesterday's Human Evolution lecture, instead of giving the same-old "modern human origins" talk to wrap up the term, we settled on "engaged" Bio-Anthro. Students really liked learning about the awesomeness of edible insects, from

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  12. Retweeted
    Dec 12

    Looking for a postdoc? Come join the Stanford Mind & Body Lab!

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  13. Retweeted
    Dec 11

    Dis/ability to do Fieldwork – The New Ethnographer: “Built into this assumption of ethnographic fieldwork is an idea of ability, of an able-bodied human—or, still, cis-man—who carries out research”

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  14. Retweeted
    Dec 12

    Changing demographics of scientific careers: The rise of the temporary workforce - who 'survives' in science appears essentially random "neither productivity, citation impact of early work nor level of collaboration reliably predicts survivability"

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  15. Retweeted
    Dec 11

    'Situating local biologies: Anthropological perspectives on environment/human entanglements' - by Jörg Niewöhner and Margaret Lock in BioSocieties:

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  16. Retweeted
    Dec 11

    Once more for the people in the back! 📢 Market-based climate solutions won't work and perpetual economic growth is not sustainable. 📢

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  17. Retweeted
    Dec 11

    Relevant for anthropologists too: 'We spend so much of our lives making fine-grained distinctions within and between fields that it’s easy to lose track of how opaque these differences are to most people.' käyttäjältä

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  18. Retweeted
    Dec 9

    Just out in : Quantifying the effect of scientific team on research impact, using a dataset of 1+ million papers. They found that ethnic diversity resulted in an **impact gain** of 11% for papers and 48% for scientists. 👩🏾‍🔬👨🏼‍🔬👩🏻‍🔬👨🏿‍🔬

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  19. Dec 11

    Charles Duhigg's The Real Roots of American Rage combines social science, reporting, and critique Why aren't anthros doing this sort of work? Still caught up in Renato Rosaldo's head hunting rage???

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  20. Dec 11

    Charles Duhigg on "The Real Roots of American Rage" in The Atlantic. Highly recommended combo of social science, reporting, and social commentary Finding resolution to rage is still US-centric idea. Article also conveys need for people feeling they matter

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