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AFA Officers

 

Cheryl Rodriguez
President (07-09)
Associate Professor of Africana Studies and Anthropology
Interim Director
Institute on Black Life
FAO 291
University of South Florida
Tampa, Florida
(813) 974-5949
crodriguez@ibl.usf.edu
http://www.usf.edu/ibl

Cheryl Rodriguez is an Associate Professor of Africana Studies and Anthropology at the University of South Florida. She is also the Director of USF’s Institute on Black Life, an organization that conducts scholarly and community-based research on issues related to Africa and the African Diaspora. She has conducted a range of anthropological projects on the intersection of gender, race and poverty. Her research on women and microenterprise development was partially supported by the Women’s Research and Education Institute. Recent research on women and low-income housing issues has been funded by the National Science Foundation and the Collaborative for Children, Families and Communities. She has also conducted extensive research on programs for youth in low-income communities and is currently the PI on a major grant on after-school programming from the U.S. Department of Education. Dr. Rodriguez has served in several leadership positions in the AAA, including chair of the Committee on the Status of Women in Anthropology.

Dorothy L. Hodgson
President Elect (07-09)
President (09-11)
Professor of Anthropology
Director of the Institute for Research on Women
Department of Anthropology
Rutgers University
131 George St.
New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1414
Tel: 732-932-0633
Fax: 732-932-1564
http://anthro.rutgers.edu/faculty/hodgson.shtml

Dorothy L. Hodgson is Director of the Institute for Research on Women and Professor of Anthropology at Rutgers University and President-elect of the national Association for Feminist Anthropology. As a historical anthropologist, she has worked in Tanzania, East Africa, for over twenty years on such topics as gender, ethnicity, cultural politics, colonialism, nationalism, modernity, the missionary encounter, transnational organizing, and the indigenous rights movement. She is the author of Once Intrepid Warriors: Gender, Ethnicity and the Cultural Politics of Maasai Development (Indiana, 2001) and The Church of Women: Gender, Power and Missionary Encounters in Tanzania (Indiana, 2005) and editor of Gendered Modernities: Ethnographic Perspectives (Palgrave, 2001), Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa: Gender, Culture and the Myth of the Patriarchal Pastoralist (James Currey & Ohio 2000), and, with Sheryl McCurdy, “Wicked” Women and the Reconfiguration of Gender in Africa (Heinemann, 2001). She recently co-edited a special volume of WSQ (formerly Women’s Studies Quarterly) with Ethel Brooks on Activisms, and is currently completing a book about the dynamics of civil society, transnational advocacy and the state in Africa tentatively title Positionings: Postcolonial Politics in a Neoliberal World. Her work has been supported by awards from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, Fulbright-Hays, American Council for Learned Societies, National Science Foundation, American Philosophical Society, Wenner-Gren Foundation, Social Science Research Council, and Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences.

Evelyn Blackwood
Treasurer (06-08)
Associate Professor
Department of Sociology and Anthropology
700 W. State Street
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN 47907
(765) 496-1728
blackwood@purdue.edu
Homepage: http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~blackwoo
 

Evelyn Blackwood divides her work between research on the matrilineal Minangkabau of West Sumatra and studies of female same-sex relations outside the West. Her publications include work on Native American female two-spirits and tombois in Indonesia as well as several articles on gender, kinship, and political economy in rural West Sumatra. She edited The Many Faces of Homosexuality: Anthropology and Homosexual Behavior (1986) and with Saskia Wieringa co-edited Female Desires: Same-sex Relations and Transgender Practices Across Cultures (Columbia University Press 1999). She is also the author of a monograph on the Minangkabau entitled Webs of Power: Women, Kin and Community in a Sumatran Village (Rowman and Littlefield 2000).

Meena Khandelwal
Secretary (06-08)

Jane Henrici
Executive Board Member (06-08)

Martin Manalansan
Executive Board Member (06-08)

Ara Wilson
Executive Board Member (06-08)

Angele Smith
Executive Board Member (06-08)
Donna Murdock
Program Co-Chair (until Nov. 2008)
Department of Anthropology
Sewanee: The University of the South

Donna F. Murdock is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Sewanee: The University of the South. She is the author of "When Women Have Wings: Feminism and Development in Medellin, Colombia" forthcoming from University of Michigan press (2008), as well as several articles on gender and development in Latin America. Currently she is working on a new research project exploring the experience of Latin American immigrants in the southeastern United States.

Laura Deeb
Program Co-Chair (until Nov. 2008)
Department of Women's Studies
University of California-Irvine

Lara Deeb is a cultural anthropologist and Assistant Professor of Women's Studies at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of ‘An Enchanted Modern: Gender and Public Piety in Shi'i Lebanon,’ as well as several articles on Islamic feminisms, Shi'I religious ritual, and Hizbullah in Lebanon. Currently she is working on a collaborative book project on leisure, space, sexuality and piety in Lebanon. She is also the book reviews editor for the Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, co-editor for reviews for American Ethnologist, a member of the Middle East Report editorial committee, and a founding member of the Radical Arab Women's Activist Network and the Task Force for Middle East Anthropology.

Rebecca Upton
Anthropology Newsletter Column Co-Editor
Department of Sociology & Anthropology
Depauw University
106 Asbury Hall
P.O. Box 37
313 S. Locust St
Greencastle, IN 46135
rupton@depauw.edu

Suzanne Baker
AFA Website Coordinator
AFA Book Review Editor
suzbaker@twmi.rr.com
Suzanne Baker is a socio-cultural anthropologist and former Director of the Women's Resource Center at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. She lived in Nicaragua for two and a half years, conducting research and assisting with development projects. Her research focused on the changes in gender ideology that the population underwent before, during and after the Sandinista Revolution. Before returning to academia in 1997, Dr. Baker worked as a consultant in Boston, and provided a variety of services to non-profit agencies that worked with immigrants and refugees. In addition to continuing her interest in and research on gender ideologies, particularly in Latin American contexts, Dr. Baker continues to work with immigrant and refugee populations, particularly with regard to domestic violence and the issue of culturally and linguistically accessible services. Dr. Baker has several publications on gender-related issues, and is on the editorial board of the Journal of International Women's Studies.

Colleen Morgan
AFA Listserv Coordinator
AFA Blog Coordinator

clmorgan@berkeley.edu
 

Beth Uzwiak
Student Representative

Voices Editor

Meet some past officers

Website maintained by Suzanne Baker