Past Conferences


2019 | Values in Anthropology, Values of Anthropology

The Australian National University, 2-5 December 2019


2019 Conference Recordings

Ensuring Anthropology Matters – To Others

Keynote Address by Professor Robert Borofsky, Center for a Public Anthropology, Hawaii Pacific University (3 Dec 2019)

Abstract

Would you concur that, perhaps, all is not well today with cultural/social anthropology? On the one hand, there is considerable pressure for accountability from those beyond the field who fund its research. They want to know how their money is being spent. Given most anthropology publications are hard for laymen to understand and administrators are unsure how to measure public benefit, administrators lean, perhaps by default, toward metrics for framing accountability – the more publications the better. On the other hand, the field has certain problematic dynamics. With its focus on individual, independent fieldwork and specialization, it is unclear whether the field’s constant research and publications are producing more knowledge – defined in terms of trustworthy information one can rely on above and beyond individual knowledge claims of veracity. Moreover, few talk across their specialized niches to address broader problems – within the field or within the broader society.

By repeatedly publishing material of limited value to those beyond the field, anthropologists may be perpetuating their own marginalization. In protecting their intellectual purity from others (in Mary Douglas’ terms), anthropologists are making themselves more vulnerable to the demands of those outside the field. Anthropology is losing its ability to chart its own fate.

Is there a way out? Perhaps. But it involves changing the way anthropologists operate – moving beyond the appearance of benefiting others to being able to offer something more substantive that will raise the field’s public value and thereby reduce the drumbeat for publications that few non-anthropologists read and value. That is what this talk is about: ensuring anthropology matters to others.


Attitude! Doing Anthropology in a Utilitarian World

Keynote Address by Professor Amita Baviskar, Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi (4 Dec 2019)

Abstract

“But what use is it?” ask my engineer and banker cousins. “It’s all very interesting…” trails off the voice of my economist colleague. “I hope you will write a report that we can send to the press,” says my activist friend. What do others expect of anthropologists and what do we expect of ourselves? How are these expectations met, repudiated and negotiated? I shall reflect on these questions from my position as an India-based practitioner who must contend with the legacies of colonial epistemologies and postcolonial imperatives in an increasingly neoliberal academy and Hindu-supremacist nation-state. I shall argue that the value of critical humanism that is central to anthropology is more vital than ever; the challenge is to uphold it in ways that include and reach beyond the academy.


A Conversation on Public Anthropology

Professor Assa Doron, (Anthropology Program, School of Culture, History & Language, CAP, ANU) in conversation with Professor Amita Baviskar (Institute of Economic Growth, Delhi, India) and Professor Robert Borofsky, (Center for a Public Anthropology, Hawaii Pacific University, USA).


2018 | Life in an Age of Death

James Cook University, Cairns Campus, 4-7 December 2018


2017 | Shifting States (Combined ASAANZ/AAS Conference)

University of Adelaide, 11-15 December 2017


2016 | Anthropocene Transitions

The University of Sydney, 12-15 December 2016


2016 Conference Recordings

Investigating the ‘complexity of change’ and ‘adaptive challenges’ of the Anthropocene: Anthropology, interdisciplinarity, and methodology

Keynote Address by Professor Susan Crate, Department of Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University (13 Dec 2016)


Beyond the Anthropocene and back to environmental justice: Anthropogenic impact in the Pacific Islands

Keynote Address by Professor Aletta Biersack, Department of Anthropology, The University of Oregon (14 Dec 2016)


2015 | Moral Horizons

The University of Melbourne, 1-4 December 2015


2015 Conference Recordings

Moral Horizons: Marriage in Mayotte

Keynote Address by Michael Lambek, University of Toronto (2 Dec 2015)


Engaging Evil: Neocannibalism and Military-Terrorist Necropolitics

Keynote Address by Nancy Scheper-Hughes, University of California, Berkeley (3 Dec 2015)


Refracted Time: From Historicity to Legal Technique in the “Comfort Women” Controversy

Keynote Address by Annelise Riles, Cornell Law School (4 Dec 2015)


Engaging the Public - Panel

Plenary discussion convened by Gerhard Hoffstaedter (University of Queensland), with Greg Downey (Macquarie University), Tess Lea (University of Sydney) and Nancy Scheper-Hughes (University of California, Berkeley) (4 Dec 2015) 


2014 | Cosmopolitan Anthropologies (Combined ASAANZ/AAS Conference)

The University of Otago (Queenstown, New Zealand), 10-13 November 2014


2013 | The Human in the World, the World in the Human

The Australian National University, 6-8 November 2013


2012 | Culture and Contest in a Material World

The University of Queensland, 26-28 September 2012


2011 | Knowledge and Value in a Globalising World

The University of Western Australia, 5-8 July 2011


2010 | Anthropology and the Community to Come

Deakin University, 23-24 September 2010


2009 | The Ethics and Politics of Engagement

Macquarie University, 9-11 December 2009


2008 | Ownership and Appropriation

The University of Auckland, 8-12 December 2008


2007 | Transforming Economies, Changing States

Australian National University, 31 October-2 November 2007