Wednesday, 11 May 2016

[wapadc] FW: Reminder: Film Screening, "The Anthropologist"

Please forward to anyone who may be interested.


From: patricia.m.clay@noaa.gov
Date: Wed, 11 May 2016 12:07:54 -0400
Subject: Fwd: Reminder: Film Screening, "The Anthropologist"
To: admin@wapadc.org

May be of interest to the membership.

Trish Clay

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Wilson Center <brazil@wilsoncenter.org>
Date: Wed, May 11, 2016 at 11:57 AM
Subject: Reminder: Film Screening, "The Anthropologist"
To: Patricia.M.Clay@noaa.gov


To view this email as a web page, click here

Managing Our Planet

Film Screening, "The Anthropologist"

At the core of the film The Anthropologist recounts the parallel stories of two women: Margaret Mead, who popularized cultural anthropology in America; and Susie Crate, an environmental anthropologist currently studying the impact of climate change. As revealed through their daughters' perspectives, Mead and Crate demonstrate a fascination with how societies are forced to negotiate the disruption of their traditional ways of life, whether through encounters with the outside world or the unprecedented change wrought by melting permafrost, receding glaciers and rising tides.
This documentary is relevant for policy, NGO and federal agencies specifically because it is based on anthropological research, one of the critical social science disciplines that methodologically clarifies the human aspects of climate change. Of late, and especially in the context of climate research, there has been significant progress in integrating the natural and social sciences to forefront critical perceptions, understandings, and responses to climate change as it interacts in the diversity of our planet's biocultural systems.
On Wednesday, May 18, the Managing Our Planet series will screen a documentary focusing on the role of anthropology in the investigation of climate change followed by a conversation with the film maker. 

The conversation is part of the ongoing "Managing Our Planet" series, jointly developed by George Mason University and the Wilson Center's Brazil Institute and Environmental Change and Security Program. The series, now in its fifth year, is premised on the fact that humanity's impacts are planetary in scale and require planetary-scale solutions.



Speakers

Susan Crate
Professor of Anthropology, George Mason University


Moderator

Paul Schopf
Professor of Oceanography, George Mason University


--

Follow the conversation

#managingourplanet

@brazilportal @NewSecurityBeat 


RSVP NOW » Forward to a Friend
RSVP Now

Wednesday, May 18, 2016
3pm - 5pm

6th Floor Flom Auditorium
Directions
Wilson Center
Ronald Reagan Building and
International Trade Center
One Woodrow Wilson Plaza
1300 Pennsylvania, Ave., NW
Washington, D.C. 20004
Phone: 202.691.4000
brazil@wilsoncenter.org
Privacy Policy

In Partnership With:







© Copyright 2015, The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, All Rights Reserved.



--


Patricia M. Clay

Anthropologist

NOAA Fisheries

Patricia.M.Clay@noaa.gov

301.427.8116

http://nefsc.noaa.gov/read/socialsci/

http://nefsc-noaa.academia.edu/PatriciaClay

Look for me on Researchgate.net.



0 comments:

Post a Comment