A Companion to Medical Anthropology. Группа авторов

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and teaching initiatives focused on increasing diversity, equity, and inclusion in the University setting, specifically studying the prevalence of racial microaggressions on university campuses.

      Sandy Smith-Nonini, PhD, is a research assistant professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her work has focused on the intersection of medical anthropology and political economy – including projects on health systems, resurgent infectious disease epidemics, working conditions of US migrant labor, and the relationship of oil dependence and debt to energy poverty. She authored Healing the Body Politic: El Salvador’s Popular Struggle for Health Rights – From Civil War to Neoliberal Peace, (Rutgers University Press, 2010), aided by a Richard Carley Hunt Award from the Wenner Gren Foundation. Sandy recently produced Dis.em.POWER.ed: Puerto Rico’s Perfect Storm, a film on the “fossil colonial” origins of the longest US blackout: www.disempoweredfilm.com.

      Merrill Singer is Emeritus Professor of Anthropology at the University of Connecticut. Dr. Singer’s work has focused on infectious disease (including COVID-19), syndemics, and environmental health. He is the author of 34 books, and over 220 peer-reviewed articles. Social justice, the social determinants of health, climate change, and critical medical anthropology have been enduring themes of his research and applied work. His most recent books are titled Climate Change and Social Inequality: The Health and Social Costs of Global Warming (Routledge, 2018) and EcoCrises Interaction: Human Health and the Changing Environment (Wiley, 2021).

      Elisa (E. J.) Sobo is Professor and Chair of Anthropology at San Diego State University. Recent projects concern the intersection between health and education, vaccination choice, cannabis use for children with intractable epilepsy, and conspiratorial thinking. Sobo is currently part of the CommuniVax coalition, a nationwide participatory action research initiative focused on community-based capacity building for an equitable and effective COVID-19 vaccination rollout. Past president of the Society for Medical Anthropology, and current Section Assembly Convener for the American Anthropological Association, Sobo has published numerous peer-reviewed journal articles and has authored, coauthored, and coedited 13 books—including second editions of both Dynamics of Human Biocultural Diversity: A Unified Approach and The Cultural Context of Health, Illness, and Medicine. Her work has been featured on NPR’s All Things Considered and by The New York Times, The Washington Post, and other news outlets.

      Patricia K. Townsend holds a courtesy appointment as Research Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology, the University at Buffalo. She is author of multiple editions of two widely used college textbooks, Medical Anthropology in Ecological Perspective (with Ann McElroy) and Environmental Anthropology: From Pigs to Policy. ​ She has done fieldwork in lowland Papua, New Guinea, and Peru and at toxic waste sites in the United States. She has done applied work with refugees and religious groups in the United States and maternal and child health services in Papua, New Guinea. In retirement, she has turned to environmental activism at a nuclear waste site, serving on the West Valley Citizen Task Force.

      E. Christian Wells is Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Center for Brownfields Research & Redevelopment at the University of South Florida, where he served previously as the Founding Director of the Office of Sustainability and as Deputy Director of the Patel School of Global Sustainability. Dr. Wells is an applied environmental anthropologist committed to improving human and environmental health outcomes of re/development efforts in marginalized communities. With support from the National Science Foundation and the US Environmental Protection Agency, his research examines water and sanitation infrastructure transitions in underserved communities in the United States, Central America, and the Caribbean. Dr. Wells is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and is the recipient of the Sierra Club’s Black Bear Award in recognition of outstanding dedication to sustainability and the environment. He currently serves as President of the Florida Brownfields Association, the state’s largest nonprofit advocacy organization dedicated to improving public health through environmental justice.

       Merrill Singer, Pamela I. Erickson, and César Abadía-Barrero

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