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Catherine Fennell's article about "deconstruction" and the practice of gleaning in Midwest circular economies, "A Forest Behind the Walls," appeared in History and Anthropology April 2026.
Rosalind Morris has received this year's Lionel Trllling Book Award for Unstable Ground: The Lives, Deaths and Afterlives of Gold in South Africa (Columbia UP, 2025). The honor, established in 1976 in honor of Lionel Trilling CC 1925, GSAS 1938, is awarded annually to a member of the faculty whose book was published in the previous year and upholds a level of excellence commensurate with Trilling’s legacy. Trilling, a gifted and dedicated Columbia professor committed to undergraduate education, was also a public intellectual known for his scholarship and literary criticism. Morris receive the…
Jorge Rodríguez Solórzano has published an emergent conversation series for the online edition of the Political and Legal Anthropology Review, entitled “Indigenous Politics, State Relations, and Populism in the Americas.”
This Emergent Conversation for PoLAR Online brings together a set of contributions by Native and non-Native academics—anthropologists, political scientists, sociologists, and scholars in Native American and Indigenous Studies—to discuss shifting relations among Indigenous nations and peoples and contemporary populist movements, parties, and leaders across Latin…
Congratulations to Mara Green, whose book Making Sense (University of California Press, 2024), received a commendation as a finalist for the American Association for Applied Linguistics 2026 book prize.
The American Association for Applied Linguistics Book Award 'recognizes outstanding work in the field of applied linguistics. In bestowing this award, the association honors books that make an exceptional contribution to the field as a whole or to a specific area of specialization.'
The Anthropology Department at Columbia University is proud to announce the launch of its new Ruth Landes Program. This program is supported by the Reed Foundation, Columbia's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and the Anthropology Department with an initial three-year pilot that seeks to energize, deepen and drive graduate student training for anthropological work that combines innovation with a commitment to social justice.
The spirit of Columbia Anthropology alumnus Ruth Landes' (PhD 1937) trailblazing ethnographic publications on Ojibwa and Afro-Brazilian women and her scholarly commitment…
Rosalind Morris's article, Impasses of the Nation: The Practical Political Philosophy of Marcel Mauss, has been published in Grey Room.
Congratulations to Rosalind Morris, whose poetry collection, For Lack of a Dictionary (Fordham 2025), has been longlisted for this year's PEN/Voelcker poetry prize. The award honors 'a poet whose distinguished collection of poetry represents a notable and accomplished literary presence.'
Congratulations to Zarino Lanni on being awarded a research fellowship by the Fondazione Migrantes! This generous award will fund his fieldwork in southern Italy the next academic year. Zarino's research interests lie at the intersection of migrant labor, housing projects in Black rural communities, and the politics of solidarity in Europe. For more information on this research project, visit: https://anthropology.columbia.edu/content/zarino-lanni
Congratulations to Maria José de Abreu, whose book, O Ginásio Carismático: Católicos Neopentecostais?, has been translated by GLAC Editions. You can purchase the book here.
The Middle East Studies Association posthumously awarded Brinkley Messick the 2025 MESA Mentoring Award. The MESA Mentoring Award was established in 1995 and first given at MESA’s 1996 annual meeting. The award recognizes exceptional contributions retired faculty have made to the education and training of others.
You can read the announcement here.
Congratulations to Mahmood Mamdani on the publication of his most recent book, Slow Poison: Idi Amin, Yoweri Museveni, and the Making of the Ugandan State. The book was launched at the Heyman Center, and has arleady been widely reviewed in The Guardian and The Wall Street Journal, among other venues.
Congratulations to E. Mara Green on her recent receipt of the Society for Linguistic Anthropology's New Voices Book Prize! The prize was announced the American Anthropology Association's annual meeting. Established in 2021, it is a biennial prize awarded to a book by a junior scholar (published within twelve years of the PhD) that makes a pathbreaking contribution to our understanding of language in society, or the ways in which language mediates historical or contemporary sociocultural processes.
Claudio Lomnitz published an op-ed titled "Mexico’s Day of the Dead Needs a New Life" in the New York Times. You can read his piece here.
An advance of Claudio Lomnitz's forthcoming book, Antropología de la Zona de Silencio published in Nexos.
Congratulations to Zoë Crossland, who has been honored this year with the invitation to deliver the 2025 McDonald Lecture at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research. The lecture, the 37th in the series, will be delivered on November 26. at the Yusuf Hamied Centre, Christ's College, and will be titled 'After Landscape.' Remote attendance is available via the link here.