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Faculty Directory

  • Birch, Jennifer Jennifer Birch

    Assistant Professor (spring 2013)

    Office: Baldwin Hall 105 J

    Research projects:

    My research explores historical trajectories of socio-political change among precontact Native societies of Eastern North America. Conceptually, this work is underpinned by a desire to explore the relationship between long-term processes of cultural change and the lived experience of individuals and communities.

    My ongoing research in Northeastern North America comprises a multi-scalar settlement study of precontact Huron-Wendat village relocation sequences in order to examine changes in the organization of the built environment as communities came together into large, fortified village aggregates. An ongoing component of my research in Ontario is the investigation of a site sequence which represents more than 500 years of contiguous occupation by a single community. One of these villages, the Mantle site, is the largest and most complex excavated to date in the Lower Great Lakes. I am currently preparing a co-authored manuscript for AltaMira Press which tells the story of the Mantle site in the context of the historical development of Northern Iroquoian societies, weaving together analyses of regional and detailed individual site settlement patterns, environmental and land-use modeling, and archaeometric analyses of ceramics and human remains.

    I am also developing a long-term, multi-sited research project which will investigate the Late Woodland-Mississippian transition in different social and environmental contexts across the state of Georgia. My intent is to combine existing data on settlement patterns and extant collections with new excavations that target communities on the cusp of the Late Woodland-Mississippian transition. This project would seek to explain the development of economic, religious, organizational, and material culture attributes associated with Mississippian societies, together with the co-evolution of archaeological and ecological landscapes. My hope is to arrive at a more nuanced understanding of how Mississippian cultural traits and institutions were adopted by or introduced to Late Woodland populations in specific local contexts.

    My research explores historical trajectories of socio-political change among precontact Native societies of Eastern North America. Conceptually, this work is underpinned by a desire to explore the relationship between long-term processes of cultural change and the lived experience of individuals and communities.

    My ongoing research in Northeastern North America comprises a multi-scalar settlement study of precontact Huron-Wendat village relocation sequences in order to examine changes in the organization of the built environment as communities came together into large, fortified village aggregates. An ongoing component of my research in Ontario is the investigation of a site sequence which represents more than 500 years of contiguous occupation by a single community. One of these villages, the Mantle site, is the largest and most complex excavated to date in the Lower Great Lakes. I am currently preparing a co-authored manuscript for AltaMira Press which tells the story of the Mantle site in the context of the historical development of Northern Iroquoian societies, weaving together analyses of regional and detailed individual site settlement patterns, environmental and land-use modeling, and archaeometric analyses of ceramics and human remains.

    I am also developing a long-term, multi-sited research project which will investigate the Late Woodland-Mississippian transition in different social and environmental contexts across the state of Georgia. My intent is to combine existing data on settlement patterns and extant collections with new excavations that target communities on the cusp of the Late Woodland-Mississippian transition. This project would seek to explain the development of economic, religious, organizational, and material culture attributes associated with Mississippian societies, together with the co-evolution of archaeological and ecological landscapes. My hope is to arrive at a more nuanced understanding of how Mississippian cultural traits and institutions were adopted by or introduced to Late Woodland populations in specific local contexts.
  • Brosius, J. Peter J. Peter Brosius

    Professor

    Director, Center for Integrative Conservation Research

    Office: Baldwin Hall 264 B
    Phone: (706) 542-1463
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: CICR
    Phone: (706) 425-3318

    Research projects:

    My research links anthropology and conservation. I have a long-standing interest in the human ecology of Southeast Asia, particularly with respect to issues of environmental degradation.

  • Garrison, Ervan Ervan Garrison

    Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 265A
    Phone: (706) 542-1470; (706) 542-1097
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Barrow Hall 14

    Research projects:

  • German, Laura Laura German

    Assistant Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 255
    Phone: (706) 542-5852
    Fax: (706) 542-3998

    Research projects:

  • Gragson, Ted Ted Gragson

    Professor

    Department Head

    Office: Baldwin Hall 250
    Phone: (706) 542-1479
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Baldwin Hall 254
    Phone: (706) 542-6160

    Research projects:

    My research centers on human decision-making and resource use at a landscape scale. I use diverse sources of evidence including interviews, cartography, and archival sources to link individuals to their natural and social environments in time and through space.

    I am the Lead Principal Investigator of the Coweeta Long Term Ecological Research Project, which is a transdisciplinary project examining the consequences that climate change and changing land use practices will have on southern Appalachia. Southern Appalachia as a region is both a ‘water tower’ to the Southeast and among the most biodiverse temperate regions in the U.S. if not the world. This research provides knowledge to other scientists, policy makers and the public that is critical to planning and managing for the future.

  • Huff, Amber Amber Huff

    Temporary Assistant Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 285

    Research projects:

  • Joseph, Christina Christina Joseph

    Part-time Assistant Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 105 I
    Fax: (706) 542-3998

    Research projects:

    My current research project focuses on the impact of popular culture on identity formation among college students of South Asian descent in the U.S.

  • Kowalewski, Stephen Stephen Kowalewski

    Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 257
    Phone: (706) 542-1462
    Fax: (706) 542-3998

    Research projects:

    Currently working in the Coixtlahuaca Valley, Oaxaca.
    Coixtlahuaca Project Web Site: http://shapiro.anthro.uga.edu/coixtlahuaca2008/

  • Lemons, Derrick Derrick Lemons

    Lecturer

    Office: Baldwin Hall 105L
    Phone: 706-206-1927

    Research projects:

  • Merritt, Stephen Stephen Merritt

    Temporary Assistant Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 265B

    Research projects:

  • Nazarea, Virginia Virginia Nazarea

    Professor

    Director, Ethnoecology and Biodiversity Lab

    Office: Baldwin Hall 105 B
    Phone: (706) 542-3852
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Baldwin Hall 105 A

    Research projects:

    I am interested in the interface between the way people see the elements and interrelationships in their environment with the way they decide and act in that environment. Further, I am concerned with the way the lenses people carry around in their heads are structured by the messages they received over time as they were growing up (and continue to receive when they are grown-up!) as members of a particular class, gender, and ethnicity. This concern has led me to explore a variety of different problems such as the distribution of local knowledge and the patterning of agricultural decision making of different categories of farmers, the relationship between marginality of production systems and the persistence of cultural memory that supports conservation of biodiversity, and the connection between mental maps and resource management practices of different groups of actors in a watershed.

  • Nelson, Donald Don Nelson

    Assistant Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 151
    Phone: (706) 542-1452
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Baldwin Hall G41

    Research projects:

    Projeto MAPLAN is a joint effort of the public sector and civil society designed to create a process of participatory development planning integrating local level contextual variations. Partners include the State Government of Ceará –the Secretariats of Planning and of Cities, FUNCEME (the state meteorological service) – and the Federal University of Ceará. The methodology is based on a Participatory GIS and integrates local communities with state level planning.

    We have recently received funding from the government of the State of Ceará to undertake an interdisciplinary exploration of climate adaptation and the changes in vulnerability trajectories throughout the state over the last 40 years. Together with researchers from The Federal University of Ceará, UC Berkeley and the University of Arizona, we will trace changes in sensitivity to climate variation through time and space. The team of social, natural and physical scientists will identify the roles of public policy, local institutions and local practices in the emergence of robust adaptation strategies. The findings are intended to help to guide regional development policies.

    I also participate in a project that explores the role of scientific knowledge in building the adaptive capacity of water management committees to respond to climate variability and change. This project is led by researchers at the University of Michigan and has partners at the State University of Rio de Janeiro. We are exploring the ongoing decentralization in Brazil’s water management sector and analyzing how scientific information interacts with the ideals of participation and democracy.

    I am also involved in ongoing research that looks at the vulnerability of rural families to climate variability in Northeast Brazil. This work is led by Duke University with partners at IRI and FUNCEME. This project explores the past impacts of drought events on households and analyzes coping and adaptation strategies. An integrated component is focused on the communication of climate forecast information to farming households. This component seeks to bridge communication between scientific forecasters and the farmers to find common languages and needs and to offer decision support for agricultural decision making.

  • Quesada, Sergio Sergio Quesada

    Sr. Academic Professional

    Undergraduate Coordinator

    Office: Baldwin Hall 253B
    Phone: (706) 542-6714
    Fax: (706) 542-3998

    Research projects:

    I am currently researching the implications of migration to Georgia and the Southeastern United States of a community of peasants from the State of Querétaro, Mexico. In the last decade, these peasants were forced to relocate when the construction of a major World Bank-funded hydroelectric project, a product of the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), destroyed their communities in the early 1990's. I am exploring the impact of the loss of their main source of work, their land, and the subsequent loss of their cultural identity and how this impacts their environment, their economic well-being, their health status and their cultural traditions.

  • Reitsema, Laurie Laurie Reitsema

    Assistant Professor (fall 2012)

    Office:

    Research projects:

  • Reitz, Elizabeth Elizabeth Reitz

    Professor

    Office: Georgia Museum of Natural History 10
    Phone: (706) 542-1464
    Lab: Georgia Museum of Natural History 1 and 6

    Research projects:

  • Tanner, Susan Susan Tanner

    Assistant Professor

    Director, Laboratory of Health and Human Biology

    Office: Baldwin Hall 266
    Phone: (706) 542-3085
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Baldwin Hall G39

    Research projects:

    I am currently exploring early childhood health and disease in Bolivia and examining changes in health and well being associated with acculturation in and around Athens, Georgia.

  • Thompson, Victor Victor Thompson

    Assistant Professor (fall 2012)

    Office:

    Research projects:

    My primary interests are in the societies that occupied the coastal and wetland areas of the American Southeast. Thus, the majority of my work has taken place in Florida and along the Georgia Coast. Specifically, I am interested in the ritual and ceremonial landscapes, subsistence systems, and the political development of the peoples who occupied these areas over extended time frames. As such, my work often encompasses time scales that cover the latter half of the Holocene (e.g., from the Late Archaic though Historic Contact). Yet another aspect of this work is understanding how societal trajectories in these regions impacted and articulated with local ecosystems.

  • Tucker, Bram Bram Tucker

    Associate Professor

    Lab: Behavioral Ecology and Economic Decisions Laboratory

    Office: Baldwin Hall 258
    Phone: (706) 542-1483
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Baldwin Hall 259

    Research projects:

    My research addresses human decision-making and behavior in an ecological and evolutionary context, with specific focus on subsistence in rural populations. My students and I are concerned with two stages of analysis. The first is how individuals make decisions, including processes of perception, evaluation, emotion, and social learning, as explored through experimental economic methods. The second stage is the behavioral outcomes of decisions, including food production and household livelihood strategies, as explored through ethnographic methods.

  • Velásquez Runk, Julie Julie Velásquez Runk

    Assistant Professor

    Office: Baldwin Hall 256
    Phone: (706) 543-0617
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Baldwin Hall 252B
    Fax: (706) 542-3998

    Research projects:

    In my research I have examined alternative narratives of history, culture, resources, and landscapes of eastern Panama and the political contexts in which they are engaged. For example, I studied how indigenous Wounaan cosmology relates to landscape and resource use as well as how conservationists understand those same topics. I also am beginning two research projects that explore the impacts of changing law on indigenous art and lands. I am an advocate for the use of multiple methods--from participatory ethnography to vegetation assessments to multi-scalar mapping--for the richness of data and depth they provide to research questions. I focus my work in Latin America, having carried out research in Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Panama, with mestizo, black, and indigenous communities.

    Currently I am working on a few research projects. First, I am working with an anthropologist colleague to examine changing land rights in Panama, which has grown increasingly dynamic and complex due to amenity migration to that country. Next, I am working with a Wounaan colleague to write up Wounaan ethnohistory in Colombia and Panama. I have submitted a funding proposal with two linguists, a cultural anthropologist, and Wounaan to archive, transcribe, and translate sixty years of recordings of Wounaan myths and legends (held by myself and three other anthropologists). In the future, I am particularly interested in looking at environmental change over time in that corpus of recordings. Finally, I have begun working on an ethnohistory of black silversmiths in Panama and Colombia.

    I also have several previous research projects that I am writing up. I am finishing up work on critical cartography, comparing data of chronosequences of Wounaan forest use (swiddens, homegardens, sites of selected tree harvest, and multi-use mature forests) in vegetation plot data and remotely sensed satellite data, to explore what they do and do not tell us for planning conservation work. I also am finalizing a manuscript on issues of Wounaan art and identity.

  • Williams, Mark Mark Williams

    Sr. Academic Professional

    Director, Georgia Archaeological Site Files

    Director, Laboratory of Archaeology

    Office: Baldwin Hall 151 C
    Phone: (706) 542-1619
    Fax: (706) 542-3998
    Lab: Riverbend Road 110
    Phone: (706) 542-8737
    Fax: (706) 542-8920

    Research projects:

    I have conducted archaeological research for some 20+ years now in the Oconee River valley of north and central Georgia, almost exclusively on sites of the late prehistoric Mississippian period. This little valley in Athens' backyard has an incredibly rich human story to be told and exhibits one of the densest human occupations in a pre-state temperate region in the world. This story is perhaps most significant with respect to the growth and eventual decline of the native chiefdom societies in this region. From about 1100 A.D. until 1600 A.D. a series of mound centers--chiefly towns were established, flourished, and eventually died out. The complex story of these centers, and the thousands of associated farmsteads, has occupied almost all of my research time during these years. These centers include the Dyar, Scull Shoals, Shoulderbone, Little River, Shinholser, and Sawyer sites.

    While the broad outlines of the Mississippian cultures in the Oconee Valley and their history have now become somewhat clearer, I have recently begun a more intense study of one of these sites in particular, Little River. This site is located in Morgan County, Georgia, and is apparently a tiny chiefly compound. These on-going excavations are important for helping us understand the workings of such a compound, both specifically in the Oconee Valley, and to the understanding of chiefdoms in the world beyond. My goal is to continue these excavations, actively involving University of Georgia Anthropology students, for several more years at least. This work is constantly being done in direct cooperation with my colleagues here in the Department, especially Ervan Garrison. He and his students, along with my own, have conducted fascinating and important remote-sensing studies at Little River, which will continue into the future.

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