Mary Cook and Jacob Hickman, Anthropology In addition to a booming tourist industry, Sapa, Vietnam is home to a number of development organizations seeking to improve the livelihoods of ethnic minorities in the region. One Hmong woman, whom I will call Maiv, started one of the first indigenous educational development programs in Sapa- ‘by Hmong […]
Morality Among the Hmog
Eric Austin Gillett and Jacob Hickman I have presented my findings at three conferences: Hmong Studies Consortium in Madison, Wisconsin (April 6, 2015), Society for the Anthropology of Religion in San Diego, California (April 12, 2015), and the American Anthropological Association in Denver, Colorado (November 18-22, 2015). I am preparing a journal article to submit […]
Mexican American Families
Nicole Rose and Dr. Greg Thompson, Anthropology Department Researchers define familismo as a “strong identification with the family” (Triandis, Marin, Betancourt, Lisansky, & Chang, 1982). Sabogal et al. said that “perceived support from family,” “family obligations,” and third, using family as cultural “referents” are important parts of familismo(Sabogal, Marín, Otero-Sabogal, Marín, & Perez-Stable, 1987). All […]
Cultural Compromises: Effects and Perceptions of Formal Education Among the Himba of Namibia
Jessica Andrus and Greg Thompson, Anthropology Introduction The Himba of Namibia have only recently been introduced to formal education within the past 20 years. Previously, formal education was not as readily available to them. This has led to a major cultural shift among the Himba. Traditionally, the Himba do not count, read, or speak English, […]
The BYU Ad‐Deir Monument and Plateau Project
Josie Newbold and Dr. Cynthia Finlayson, Department of Anthropology Introduction Petra, Jordan is famous for being the city carved out of red sandstone cliffs. The builders of Petra were the Nabataeans, a people believed to be nomadic at one point in time, who settled in a desert and created a vast empire. They were renowned […]
Conservation of Metallic Beads
Heather White and Dr. Paul Stavast, Anthropology Introduction Brigham Young University’s Museum of Peoples and Cultures has an extensive and varying collection of anthropological, ethnographic, and archaeological artifacts. Within these artifacts are leather items with metallic beading. These beads have been actively deteriorating, damaging themselves, the leather, the strings that keeps them sewn, and other […]
Paleopathologies of a Nabataean Burial Site
Mariana L. F. Castroand Dr. David Johnson, Department of Anthropology INTRODUCTION The purpose of this project was to examine the paleopathologies of Nabataean burial remains, with emphasis on the osteological evidences for diet, sex and age. The main goal of Archaeology is to uncover the past. However, this cannot be done if scholars and students […]
Text Panels for the Museum of Archeology, Palmyra Syria: The Temple Bel / Palmyra’s Coinage
David Amott and Dr. Cynthia Finlayson, Department of Art History This project helps to fulfill a crucial need for research on a highly important collection of ancient artifacts housed in the Archeology Museum of Tadmor-Palmyra, Syria. The collection is significant in that it documents the history and culture of a major center of the ancient […]
Pipe Smoking among the Prehistoric Inhabitants of Utah Valley
Hannah Steffensen and Dr. Michael Searcy, Department of Anthropology In the Spring of 2012, thirtynine prehistoric smoking pipes and pipe fragments were recovered from the Fremont archaeological site of Wolf Village in Goshen, Utah. Brigham Young University has conducted excavations at the Wolf Village site for five years, recovering hundreds of thousands of artifacts and […]
Agentive Hmong Memory Making: “We Stood Up to Them”
April Reber Racialized environmentalism and politicized economics converged in July and August, 2000, when a coalition of Thai farmers, Royal Forestry Department (RFD) and other government officials blocked off roads leading to Hmong farms in the mountains in Thailand. This coalition collaboratively targeted Hmong lychee orchards that had almost reached maturation (it takes lychee trees […]
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