It is quite natural that people behave according to their environment and it is also well documented that culture plays a vital role to control behavior of an individual as Meed has pointed out in…Continue
Started this discussion. Last reply by John McCreery Jun 7, 2012.
WISHING YOU ALL A VERY HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR 2012Along withInvitation for Paper ProposalWelcome to the 17th World Congress of the International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological…Continue
Started Jan 6, 2012
Very good morning Dear all Anthropologists and social scientists across the globe, here I am going to know your views about tension and frustration anthropologically because after neolithic when…Continue
Started this discussion. Last reply by A. Ashkuff May 7, 2011.
dEAR aLL aNTHROPOLOGISTS/sOCIOLOGISTS/sOCIAL-SCIENTISTSJust inhale all above said words which started with small alphabet and then try to under stand the problem of CORRUPTION across the blue planet.…Continue
Started this discussion. Last reply by Michelle Apr 16, 2011.
John McCreery replied to Dr. Alok Chantia's discussion anthropology of impatience
JARWA TRIBE REGION AS BUFFER ZONE
Five months after two British newspapers released a controversial video film showing scantily clad Jarawa tribal women dancing for tourists in return for food and money, the government finally acted on Thursday: the Union Cabinet approved the
promulgation of a law that brings into effect a buffer zone in the 5 km radius around the Jarawa tribal settlements in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and provides for imprisonment up to seven years…
Posted on June 2, 2012 at 9:25am
In his story of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Robert Louis Stevenson famously shows the dark side of humanity. The respectable and kind Dr. Jekyll devises a potion that enables him to bring to…
Posted on May 29, 2012 at 5:22am
Posted on May 28, 2012 at 4:14am
"Some mammals may be more vulnerable to climate change than previously anticipated," Carrie Schloss of the University of Washington, US, told environmentalresearchweb. "For example, many primates and shrews and moles will likely be unable to keep pace with climate change across much of their ranges. On the other hand, carnivores such as coyotes or wolves and ungulates such as moose will likely be able to keep pace with changes in climate."
Schloss and colleagues looked at…
ContinuePosted on May 27, 2012 at 2:39am
RAHUL PATEL said…
RAHUL PATEL said…
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