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American Anthropological Association



 
 
Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association (AAA) is the world’s largest professional organization of scholars and practitioners in the field of anthropology
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
. With 11,000 members, the Arlington, Virginia based association includes archaeologists, cultural anthropologists, biological (or physical) anthropologists, linguists and applied anthropologists in universities and colleges, research institutions, government agencies, museums, corporations and non-profits throughout the world.






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Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association (AAA) is the world’s largest professional organization of scholars and practitioners in the field of anthropology
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
. With 11,000 members, the Arlington, Virginia based association includes archaeologists, cultural anthropologists, biological (or physical) anthropologists, linguists and applied anthropologists in universities and colleges, research institutions, government agencies, museums, corporations and non-profits throughout the world. The AAA conducts the largest annual meeting of anthropologists and publishes over 20 peer-reviewed scholarly journals, available in print and online through AnthroSource.

History


According to its articles of incorporation, the AAA was formed to:
...promote the science of anthropology, to stimulate and coordinate the efforts of American anthropologists, to foster local and other societies devoted to anthropology, to serve as a bond among American anthropologists and anthropologic[al] organizations present and prospective, and to publish and encourage the publication of matter pertaining to anthropology.
At its incorporation, the association assumed responsibility for the journalAmerican Anthropologist
American Anthropologist

American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association . It is known for publishing a wide range of work in anthropology, including articles on cultural, biological and linguistic anthropology and archeology....
, created in 1888 by the Anthropological Society of Washington (ASW). By 1905, the journal also served the American Ethnological Society
American Ethnological Society

The American Ethnological Society is the oldest professional anthropology association in the United States....
, in addition to the AAA and ASW.

From an initial membership of 175, the AAA grew slowly during the first half of the 20th century. Annual meetings were held primarily in the Northeast and accommodated all attendees in a single room. Since 1950, the AAA’s membership has increased dramatically, now averaging around 11,000. Annual meetings frequently draw over 5,000 individuals, who attend over 500 sessions organized into a five-day program.

The AAA has been a democratic organization since its beginning. Although Franz Boas
Franz Boas

Franz Boas was a Germans-United States anthropologist and a pioneer of modern anthropology who has been called the "Father of American Anthropology"....
 initially fought to restrict membership to an exclusive group of 40 "professional anthropologists," the AAA's first president, W. J. McGee, argued for a more inclusive membership embracing all those who expressed an interest in the discipline. McGee's vision still guides the association today. Business affairs are now conducted by a 41-member Section Assembly representing each of the association's constituent sections, and a 15-member Executive Board. This increase in representation reflects the growing diversity of the discipline, which is viewed by many as a source of strength for the association and for American anthropology as a whole. In Richard B. Woodbury's words, ". . .the AAA has remained the central society for the discipline, addressing with considerable success its increasingly varied interests and speaking for anthropology to other fields, the federal and state governments, and the public."

Sections

The AAA is composed of 38 sections, which are groups organized around identity affiliations or intellectual interests within the discipline of anthropology. Sections each have an elected president or chair and many publish journals and host meetings.

Publications

The AAA today publishes over 20 section publications including, among others, American Anthropologist
American Anthropologist

American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association . It is known for publishing a wide range of work in anthropology, including articles on cultural, biological and linguistic anthropology and archeology....
, American Ethnologist, Cultural Anthropology, Anthropology & Education Quarterly and Medical Anthropology Quarterly. The AAA’s official newspaper, Anthropology News, is published monthly September through May. It has a monthly circulation of 11,000-12,000, including members and individual and institutional subscribers. Since 1962 the association has published the AAA Guide, which lists anthropology departments, with staff and program information. It gradually expanded to include section and association membership directories, information on industry and research firms, government and non-profit agencies and museums, academic statistics and PhD
PHD

PHD may refer to:* Parisada Hindu Dharma, an Indonesian reform organization* PHD, a track on The Crystal Method album Tweekend* PHD finger, a protein sequence...
s granted in the discipline. AAA publications are available in print and online through AnthroSource.

Meetings

Since 1902, the AAA’s meetings have been important venues for the exchange of anthropological knowledge, conducting business and conversing with colleagues from all areas of anthropology. As the AAA has grown, its meetings have expanded. The 2007 annual meeting had an attendance of 5,500 people with 534 sessions. The ability to connect with colleagues remains a major reason for attending the annual meeting, whether those colleagues are other AAA members, members of related societies, publishers, policymakers, employers or media. In recent years, the AAA annual meeting location has alternated between Washington, DC and other U.S. cities. The 2008 annual meeting was held in San Francisco, Calif.

Public issues involvement


From its earliest years, the AAA has given serious attention to public issues involving anthropology. For example, the AAA supported the passage of the Antiquities Act of 1906, protested the discontinuance of anthropological research in the Philippines (1915), urged the teaching of anthropology in high schools (1927), spoke out for the preservation of archaeological materials when dams were built by the Tennessee Valley Authority
Tennessee Valley Authority

The Tennessee Valley Authority is a federally owned corporation in the United States created by congressional charter in May 1933 to provide navigation, Flood, electricity generation, fertilizer manufacturing, and economic development in the Tennessee Valley, a region particularly impacted by the Great Depression....
 (1935), passed a pre-WWII resolution against racism (1938), and expressed the need to “guard against the dangers, and utilize the promise, inherent in the use of atomic energy” (1945).

In the 1960s and early 1970s, the association examined the issues of government-sponsored classified research, use of anthropologists by the military in Vietnam, secret research in Thailand, and the general problem of a code of ethics for anthropological research, particularly for the protection of the rights of those studied. Other issues addressed from the 1970s through the 1980s include illegal antiquities trade
Antiquities trade

Antiquities trade is the trade in historical artifacts from around the world. This trade may be illicit or completely legal. The illicit antiquities trade involves non-scientific extraction that ignores the Archaeology and Anthropology context from which the artifacts derive....
, the insertion of religious beliefs into social science texts, the preservation of endangered nonhuman primates, and the religious significance of peyote
Peyote

Lophophora williamsii , better known by its common name Peyote, , is a small, spineless cactus. It is native to southwestern Texas and through central Mexico....
 to Native Americans
Native Americans in the United States

Native Americans in the United States are the Indigenous peoples of the Americas from the regions of North America now encompassed by the continental United States United States, including parts of Alaska and the island state of Hawaii....
. In the 1990s, in response to continued public confusion about the meaning of “race,” particularly public misconceptions about race and intelligence
Race and intelligence

Race and intelligence have in some cases been claimed to be correlated. Contemporary debate on this issue focuses on the nature, causes, and rectifications of ethnic group differences in intelligence test scores....
, the AAA Executive Board commissioned a position paper on race as a constructed social mechanism.

In 2004, in response to President George W. Bush
George W. Bush

George Walker Bush served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 2001 to 2009. He was the 46th List of Governors of Texas from 1995 to 2000 before being United States presidential inauguration as President on January 20, 2001....
’s call for a constitutional amendment
Constitutional amendment

An amendment is a change to the Constitution of a nation or a state. In jurisdictions with "rigid" or "entrenched" constitutions, amendments require a special procedure different from that used for enacting ordinary laws....
 banning same-sex marriage
Same-sex marriage

Same-sex marriage and gay marriage are terms for a Law or socially recognized marriage between two people of the same sex. While state-sanctioned same-sex marriage is a relatively new phenomenon in the modern world, same-sex unions have been documented throughout human history....
, the AAA issued a statement on marriage and the family. It states:
The results of more than a century of anthropological research on households, kinship relationships, and families, across cultures and through time, provide no support whatsoever for the view that either civilization or viable social orders depend upon marriage as an exclusively heterosexual institution. Rather, anthropological research supports the conclusion that a vast array of family types, including families built upon same-sex partnerships, can contribute to stable and humane societies.
The AAA also has adopted resolutions against the U.S. invasion of Iraq, against the use of anthropological knowledge as an element for physical or psychological torture, and against any covert or overt U.S. military action against Iran
Iran

Iran , officially the Islamic Republic of Iran and formerly known internationally as Persian Empire until 1935, is a country in Central Eurasia, located on the northeastern shore of the Persian Gulf and the southern shore of the Caspian Sea....
.

RACE: Are We So Different?

To help promote more complex and nuanced understandings of race and human variation, the AAA developed and currently manages a public education program titled “RACE Are We So Different?” The program includes a traveling museum exhibit, an interactive website , and educational materials. “RACE Are We So Different?” looks at race in the United States through history, science and lived experience. The program explains how human variation differs from race, when and why the idea of race was invented, and how race and racism affect everyday life.

Controversy


A number of ideologically polarized debates within the discipline of anthropology have prompted the AAAS to conduct investigations. These include the dispute between Derek Freeman
Derek Freeman

John Derek Freeman was a New Zealand anthropologist best known for his work in attempting to refute the claims of Margaret Mead in her study of Samoan society, as described in her 1928 ethnography Coming of Age in Samoa....
 and defenders of Margaret Mead
Margaret Mead

Margaret Mead was an United States cultural anthropology, who was frequently a featured writer and speaker in the mass media throughout the 1960s and 1970s....
 and also the controversy over the book Darkness in El Dorado
Darkness in El Dorado

Darkness in El Dorado is a book written by investigative journalism Patrick Tierney in 2000 that accuses geneticist James Neel and anthropologist Napoleon Chagnon of exacerbating a measles epidemic among the Yanomamo people and conducting human research without regard for their subjects' wellbeing....
.

Engaging with the Military


Vietnam War
In March 1967, during the Vietnam War
Vietnam War

The Vietnam War, also known as the Second Indochina Wars, the Vietnam Conflict, or often in Vietnam the American War occurred in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia from 1959 to April 30, 1975....
, the Council of the AAAS adopted a "Statement on Problems of Anthropological Research and Ethics" that stated: "Except in the event of a declaration of war by Congress, academic institutions should not undertake activities or accept contracts in anthropology that are not related to their normal functions of teaching, research, and public service. They should not lend themselves to clandestine activities. . . . The international reputation of anthropology
Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans and humanity in its totality. Anthropology has origins in the natural sciences, and the humanities. In Great Britain it was originally divided into physical anthropology and cultural anthropology, which itself was divided into archaeology, technology, ethnology and sociology ....
 has been damaged by the activities of unqualified individuals who have falsely claimed to be anthropologists, or who have pretended to be engaged in anthropological research while in fact pursuing other ends. There is also good reason to believe that some anthropologists have used their professional standing and the names of their academic institutions as cloaks for the collection of intelligence
Intelligence (information gathering)

Intelligence is not information, but the product of evaluated information, valued for its currency and relevance rather than its detail or accuracy —in contrast with "data" which typically refers to precision or particular information, or "fact," which typically refers to veracity information....
 information and for intelligence operations. Academic institutions and individual members of the academic community, including students, should scrupulously avoid both involvement in clandestine intelligence activities and the use of the name of anthropology, or the title of anthropologist, as a cover for intelligence activities." The US has not declared war since 1942, when it did so on Romania.

A statement on "Principles of Professional Responsibility" adopted by the same Council in May 1971 stated: "In relation with their own government and with host governments, research anthropologists should be honest and candid. They should demand assurance that they will not be required to compromise their professional responsibilities and ethics as a condition of their permission to pursue research. Specifically, no secret research, no secret reports or debriefings of any kind should be agreed to or given.

Human Terrain System
Through 2007 and 2008, debates surrounding anthropologists and the military have resurfaced in response to the Pentagon
Pentagon

In geometry, a pentagon is any five-sided polygon. A pentagon may be simple or self-intersecting. The internal angles in a simple pentagon total 540?....
’s Human Terrain System
Human terrain system

The Human Terrain System is a United States Army program which embeds anthropologists and other social scientists with combat brigades to help military tactics in the field understand local cultures using Human Terrain Mapping .....
 (HTS) project.

Following a number of national news articles on HTS, anthropologists began to debate the project and related ethical issues. Proponents of the HTS program argued that anthropologists were providing much-needed cultural knowledge about local populations and helping to decrease violence in their areas of operation. Critics, however, argued that HTS anthropologists could not receive informed consent from their research subjects in a war zone
War Zone

A war zone is a location of military conflict, but the term may also refer to:* The War Zone, a 1999 film starring Ray Winstone* War Zone , a 2000 episode of the television series Angel...
 and that information provided by anthropologists might put populations in danger.

To address these issues, the AAA’s Executive Board released a statement on the HTS project on 31 October 2007. The statement cites, “sufficiently troubling and urgent ethical issues” raised by the HTS project, including the difficulties for HTS anthropologists to receive informed consent without coercion from their research subjects and to uphold their ethical mandate to “do no harm” to those they study . The AAA urges members to adhere to its code of ethics, which outlines principles and guidelines for ethical behavior. However, the association does not adjudicate cases involving charges of unethical behavior or bar members from participating in the HTS program.

In addition, the AAA’s Commission on the Engagement of Anthropology with US Security and Intelligence Communities (CEAUSSIC) issued a final report in November 2007, based on over a year of work on this subject. The report neither endorsed nor condemned anthropological work with military, intelligence and security organizations, but instead outlined the opportunities and challenges of working in these sectors.. The report was released during the AAA's 2007 annual meeting and its contents were debated during several panel events.

Opposition to military cooperation was evident during the 2007 AAA annual meeting in Washington, DC. Some critics of the HTS program have suggested that scholars who perform classified work with the military be expelled from the organization. During an event organized by the Network of Concerned Anthropologists, a graduate student who had recently been expelled from the HTS program spoke out about her experiences with the program. She argued that the program was poorly run but was doing positive work in helping military officers with "nation-building
Nation-building

For nation-building in the sense of enhancing the capacity of state institutions, building state-society relations, and also external interventions see State-building...
" activities. She began crying when some scholars shouted criticisms about her finance for his continued participation in the HTS program. Another scholar came to her defense and urged the crowd to show her respect for sharing her views before a critical audience.

AnthroSource

AnthroSource is the online repository of the journals of the American Anthropological Association. Launched in 2004, AnthroSource contains current issues for fifteen of the AAA's peer-reviewed publications, as well as an archive of the journals, newsletters, and bulletins published by the American Anthropological Association and its member sections. Members of the AAA are given access to AnthroSource as a benefit of membership, and institutions may receive access via paid subscription.

Until August 2007, AnthroSource was a collaboration between the University of California Press
University of California Press

University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing....
 and the American Anthropological Association. It, along with all AAA journals, has since been pulled from the University of California Press by the AAA Board and given to Wiley-Blackwell, the new publisher created when John Wiley & Sons
John Wiley & Sons

John Wiley & Sons, Inc., also referred to as Wiley, is a global publishing company that markets its products to professionals and consumers, students and instructors in higher education, and researchers and practitioners in scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly fields....
 purchased Blackwell Publishing
Blackwell Publishing

Blackwell Publishing Ltd was a learned society publishing company based in Oxford, England. It was formed by the merger of two earlier Blackwell companies in 2001 and was taken over by John Wiley & Sons in 2007....
 in February 2007. Commencing 2008, AnthroSource is to be hosted and managed by Wiley-Blackwell as part of the five-year publishing contract awarded.

Primary peer-reviewed journals

  • American Anthropologist
    American Anthropologist

    American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association . It is known for publishing a wide range of work in anthropology, including articles on cultural, biological and linguistic anthropology and archeology....
  • American Ethnologist
  • Anthropology & Education Quarterly
  • Anthropology & Humanism
  • Anthropology of Consciousness
  • Anthropology of Work Review
  • Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association
  • Central Issues in Anthropology
  • City & Society
  • Cultural Anthropology
  • Culture & Agriculture
  • El Mensajero
  • Ethos
  • Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology
  • Journal of Linguistic Anthropology
  • Journal of the Society for the Anthropology of Europe
  • Medical Anthropology Quarterly
  • Museum Anthropology
  • North American Dialogue
  • Nutritional Anthropology
  • PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review
  • SOLGANs
  • Transforming Anthropology
  • Visual Anthropology Review
  • Voices


Past AAA Presidents

  • William J McGee (1902-1904)
  • F W Putnam (1905-1906)
  • Franz Boas
    Franz Boas

    Franz Boas was a Germans-United States anthropologist and a pioneer of modern anthropology who has been called the "Father of American Anthropology"....
     (1907-1908)
  • W H Holmes
    William Henry Holmes

    William Henry Holmes was an American anthropologist, archaeologist, geologist and museum director.Born in Harrison County, Ohio, Holmes graduated from McNeely Normal College in 1870 and briefly went into teaching....
     (1909-1910)
  • J Walter Fewkes
    J. Walter Fewkes

    Jesse Walter Fewkes was an United States anthropologist, archaeologist, writer and natural history. He was born in Newton, Massachusetts, and initially trained as a zoologist at Harvard University....
     (1911-1912)
  • Roland B Dixon (1913-1914)
  • F W Hodge (1915-1916)
  • Alfred L Kroeber (1917-1918)
  • Clark Wissler
    Clark Wissler

    Clark Wissler was an United States anthropology.Born near Hagerstown, Indiana, Wissler graduated from Indiana University Bloomington in 1897....
     (1919-1920)
  • W. C. Farabee (1921-1922)
  • Walter Hough
    Walter Hough

    Walter Hough, Ph.D. was an United States ethnologist, born at Morgantown, West Virginia He was educated at Monongalia Academy, West Virginia Agricultural College, and West Virginia University ....
     (1923-1924)
  • Ales Hrdlicka (1925-1926)
  • Marshall H. Saville (1927-1928)
  • Alfred M. Tozzer (1929-1930)
  • George G. MacCurdy (1931)
  • John R. Swanton
    John R. Swanton

    John Reed Swanton was an United States anthropologist who worked with Native American peoples throughout the United States.Born in Gardiner, Maine, Swanton's work in the fields of ethnology and ethnohistory is well recognized....
     (1932)
  • Fay-Cooper Cole
    Fay-Cooper Cole

    Fay-Cooper Cole was a professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago and most famously was a witness for the defense for John Scopes at the Scopes Trial....
     (1933-1934)
  • Robert H. Lowie (1935)
  • Herbert J. Spinden (1936)
  • Nels C. Nelson (1937)
  • Edward Sapir
    Edward Sapir

    Edward Sapir , was a Jewish-Germany-United States anthropologist-linguistics and a leader in American structuralism. He was one of the creators of what is now called the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis....
     (1938)
  • Diamond Jenness
    Diamond Jenness

    Diamond Jenness, Order of Canada was one of Canada's greatest early scientists and a pioneer of Canadian anthropology.He graduated from Victoria University College of Wellington , and Balliol College, Oxford University ....
     (1939)
  • John M. Cooper (1940)
  • Elsie Clews Parsons
    Elsie Clews Parsons

    Elsie Clews Parsons was an United States anthropologist, sociologist, folklorist, and feminist who studied Indigenous peoples of the Americas tribes?such as the Pueblo people and Hopi?in Arizona, New Mexico, and Mexico....
     (1941)
  • A.V. Kidder (1942)
  • Leslie Spier (1943)
  • Robert Redfield
    Robert Redfield

    Robert Redfield was an United States anthropology and ethnolinguist. Redfield graduated from the University of Chicago, eventually with a JD from its law school and then a Doctor of Philosophy in cultural anthropology, which he began to teach in 1927....
     (1944)
  • Neil M Judd
    Neil Judd

    Neil Merton Judd was an United States archeology who studied under the pioneering archaeologist of the American Southwest, Edgar Lee Hewett. He was curator of archaeology at the erstwhile United States National Museum, which later became part of the Smithsonian Institution....
     (1945)
  • Ralph Linton
    Ralph Linton

    Ralph Linton was one of the best-known American anthropologists of the mid-twentieth century, and is particularly remembered for his works The Study of Man and The Tree of Culture ....
     (1946)
  • Ruth Benedict
    Ruth Benedict

    Ruth Benedict was an United States anthropologist.She was born in New York City, and attended Vassar College, graduating in 1909. She entered graduate studies at Columbia University in 1919, studying under Franz Boas, receiving her Doctor of Philosophy and joining the faculty in 1923....
     (Jan-May 1947)
  • Clyde Kluckhohn
    Clyde Kluckhohn

    Clyde Kluckhohn , was an American Social anthropology and social theorist, best known for his long-term ethnographic work among the Navajo people and his contributions to the development of theory of culture within American anthropology....
     (May-Dec 1947)
  • Harry L. Shapiro
    Harry L. Shapiro

    Harry Lionel Shapiro was an American author, eugenicist, and Professor of Anthropology....
     (1948)
  • A. Irving Hallowell (1949)
  • Ralph L. Beals (1950)
  • William W. Howells
    William W. Howells

    Dr William White Howells was a professor of anthropology at Harvard University. His most notable research concluded that modern humans are of one species....
     (1951)
  • Wendell C. Bennett (1952)
  • Fred R. Eggan (1953)
  • John Otis Brew
    John Otis Brew

    John Otis Brew, born March 28, 1906, was an American Southwest archaeologist that not only conducted extensive archaeological research, but was also a director at the Peabody Museum....
     (1954)
  • George P. Murdock (1955)
  • Emil W. Haury (1956)
  • E. Adamson Hoebel
    E. Adamson Hoebel

    E. Adamson Hoebel was Regents Professor Emeritus of anthropology at the University of Minnesota. He held a Ph.D. in anthropology from Columbia University, where he also attended the seminars of Karl N....
     (1957)
  • Harry Hoijer
    Harry Hoijer

    Harry Hoijer was a linguist and anthropologist who worked on primarily Athabaskan languages and culture.He additionally documented the Tonkawa language, which is now extinct language....
     (1958)
  • Sol Tax
    Sol Tax

    Sol Tax was an United States anthropologist. He is best known for his studies of the Sauk Indians, for "action-anthropological" research titled the Fox Project, and for founding the academic journal Current Anthropology. He received his doctorate from the University of Chicago in 1935....
     (1959)
  • Margaret Mead
    Margaret Mead

    Margaret Mead was an United States cultural anthropology, who was frequently a featured writer and speaker in the mass media throughout the 1960s and 1970s....
     (1960)
  • Gordon R Willey (1961)
  • Sherwood L. Washburn (1962)
  • Morris E. Opler (1963)
  • Leslie A. White (1964)
  • Alexander Spoehr (1965)
  • John P. Gillin (1966)
  • Frederica de Laguna
    Frederica de Laguna

    Frederica de Laguna was an American anthropologist. Her parents, Theodore de Laguna and Grace de Laguna, were, respectively, Spanish-American and, in Frederica's own words, "Connecticut Yankee"....
     (1967)
  • Irving Rouse (1968)
  • Cora DuBois
    Cora DuBois

    Cora Alice Du Bois, was an American cultural anthropologist and a key figure in culture and personality studies and in psychological anthropology more generally....
     (1969)
  • George M. Foster, Jr. (1970)
  • Charles Wagley (1971)
  • Anthony F. C. Wallace
    Anthony F. C. Wallace

    Anthony Francis Clarke Wallace is a Canadian-American anthropologist who specializes in Native American cultures, especially the Iroquois. His research expresses an interest in the intersection of cultural anthropology and psychology....
     (1972)
  • Joseph B. Casagrande (1973)
  • Edward H. Spicer (1974)
  • Ernestine Friedl (1975)
  • Walter Goldschmidt (1976)
  • Richard N. Adams (1977)
  • Francis L. K. Hsu
    Francis L. K. Hsu

    Francis L. K. Hsu was one of the twentieth-century leaders in the study of culture and personality, which at his suggestion was renamed psychological anthropology....
     (1978)
  • Paul J. Bohannan
    Paul J. Bohannan

    Paul James Bohannan was an United States anthropologist, professor and writer. His 1963 textbook Social Anthropology was widely used.Bohannan was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, Nebraska, to Hillory Bohannan and Hazel Truex Bohannan....
     (1979)
  • Conrad M. Arensberg (1980)
  • William C Sturtevant (1981)
  • M. Margaret Clark (1982)
  • Dell Hathaway Hymes (1983)
  • Nancy O. Lurie (1984-1985)
  • June Helm (1986-1987)
  • Roy Rappaport
    Roy Rappaport

    Roy A. Rappaport was a distinguished anthropologist known for his contributions to the anthropological study of ritual and to ecological anthropology....
     (1988-1989)
  • Jane Buikstra (1989-1991)
  • Annette Weiner (1991-1993)
  • James Peacock (1993-1995)
  • Yolanda T. Moses (1995-1997)
  • Jane Hill (1997-1999)
  • Louise Lamphere
    Louise Lamphere

    Louise Lamphere is an United States anthropologist who has been distinguished professor of anthropology at the University of New Mexico since 1986....
     (1999-2001)
  • Don Brenneis (2001-2003)
  • Elizabeth M. Brumfiel (2003-2005)
  • Alan Goodman (2005-2007)
  • Setha Low
    Setha Low

    Setha Low is the current president of the American Anthropological Association, a professor in environmental psychology, and the director of the Public Space Research Group at the City University of New York....
     (2007-Present)


External links