News & Events
Katie Donlan's (Cultural Anthropology, PhD Candidate) co-authored article, "25th Anniversary Retrospective: American Ethnologist in the Year 2000," published on AES Online. The piece is a roundup of notable articles from AE 2000 by Emma Kahn, Katie
Cookies were iced, sweaters were judged, and festive fun was had by all! 🍪🎄 A huge thank you to everyone who made our End-of-Year Student Reprieve so memorable.Wishing our amazing community joyful holidays and a sparkling New Year!Here's to making
Gabrielle Perry(Archaeology, PhD in progress) has successfully passed her Phd qualifying exams.
Jessica Hiroshima Misiorek (Cultural Anthropology, PhD Candiate) awarded the Kathleen M. Adams Paper Award for her MA thesis: "Making the Japanese and the Foreign: Discourses of Overtourism, Nihonjinron, and Mixed and Multicultural Japanese Identity
Alumna, Lucas Rozell's (MA Anthropology 2024) and Professor Kate Goldfarb's co-authored essay, ""Living Archives," about work on the Marshall Fire Story Project published in American Ethnological Society Online.Read the article in AES Online
The CU Department of Anthropology was in excellent form during the recent American Anthropological Association meetings in New Orleans. In addition to over a dozen different research panels, we also celebrated our scholarship and our community
Nicholas Puente (Archeology, PhD Candidate) and Professor Sarah Kurnick publish,"Maya Roads as Kuxansumob: Analyzing an Intrasite Sak-Be," in Latin American Antiquity Journal. Puente and Kurnick challenge conventional Western understandings of
Anden Drolet successfully defended his dissertation, "Pressurized to Leave: Balancing Values in Urban Bhutan." Anden's committee included Carole McGranahan as advisor, along with Professors Alison Cool, Kate Goldfarb, Carla Jones, and
Alumna Paige Edmiston (PhD Anthropology, 2025) awarded the 2025 David Hakken Graduate Student Paper Prize from the Committee on the Anthropology of Science, Technology, and Computing. Her award-winning paper, “So Consistently Incompetent It
Professor Kate Goldfarb awarded a research fellowship from the Japan Foundation for her upcoming sabbatical. This fellowship will support her project, "The Futures of Japanese Child Welfare," a co-designed, collaborative, and community-engaged