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Katheryn
Twiss is a graduate student in Archaeology at U. C. Berkeley. Her
work focuses on the anthropology of food and zooarchaeology in the Neolithic
Near East.
Anthropology Department
U. C. Berkeley
twiss@sscl.berkeley.edu
Kathy
Baylis is a PhD candidate in the Department of Agriculture and Resource
Economics at UC Berkeley. She has just returned from a year as the economist
in charge of agricultural issues with President Bush's Council of Economic
Advisors. Prior to her graduate work, she was executive secretary and
director of communications with the National Farmers Union in Canada.
She has recently co-authored a textbook on U.S. and Canadian agricultural
policy.
Department of Agriculture and Resource
Economics
U. C. Berkeley
baylis@are.berkeley.edu
Roger
Bryne is a Professor of Geography at U. C. Berkeley. His work focuses
on historical biogeography, vegetation change, prehistoric agriculture,
pollen analysis. He has worked extensively in Mexico and California.
Geography Department
U. C. Berkeley
arbyrne@uclink4.berkeley.edu
Eric
Crystal is an anthropologist who has been involved in research, teaching,
and consulting relating to Southeast Asia for over thirty years. An accomplished
photographer, he has been committed to documenting both traditional Southeast
Asian culture and the processes of social and economic change in the region.
Dr. Crystal initiated and directed the first U.C. Education Abroad Program
in Hanoi, Vietnam in l999 and in recent years has worked with the national
Museum of Ethnology in Hanoi. He retired from his position as Vice-Chair
of the U.C. Berkeley Center for Southeast Asia Studies in 2000 to focus
on research and part time teaching in the Group for Asian Studies at CAL.
Group in Asian Studies
U. C. Berkeley
ecrystal@uclink.berkeley.edu
Edan
Dekel is a graduate student in the Department of Classics at the U.
C. Berkeley where he is studying comparative epic, comparative mythology,
and comparative linguistics. He is a popular lecturer in the ORIAS program
and received an Outstanding Graduate Student Instructor Award for his
work with U. C. Berkeley undergraduates. During the summer he teaches
Mythology, Ancient Greek, and Language Studies to pre-collegiate students
at the School of Education's Academic Talent Development Program at Berkeley.
Classics Department
U. C. Berkeley
edan@uclink4.berkeley.edu
Hema
Gonzales holds an elementary teaching credential and works as a clinical
social worker. She was born and raised in India and is active in South
Asian cultural outreach.
c/o ORIAS
U.C. Berkeley
orias@uclink4.berkeley.edu
Alan
Karras is a professor in the International and Area Studies teaching
program. He works on political economy of industrial societies wtih a
focus on race relations, state formation, migration, and contraband trade.
International and Area Studies Teaching
Programs
U. C. Berkeley
karras@socrates.Berkeley.EDU
David
N. Keightley is Professor Emeritus of History at the U. C. Berkeley.
The author of Sources of Shang History: The Oracle-Bone Inscriptions of
Bronze Age China (1978), The Ancestral Landscape: Time, Space, and Community
in Late Shang China (ca. 1200-1045 B.C.) (2000), and the editor of The
Origins of Chinese Civilization (1983), Keightley has written numerous
articles on Neolithic and Bronze-Age China. He is currently at work on
a book that deals with Kingship and Religion in the Late Shang.
History Department
U. C. Berkeley
keightle@socrates.berkeley.edu
Rheyna
Laney is a professor at the Geographic Information Center at Sonoma
State University. She received her Ph D from Clark University. Her world
area of interest is Africa south of Sahara, and her research focuses on
agricultural change and the relationship between environmental conservation
and agricultural practices in Madagascar. Other areas of expertise include
ecology with a focus on the political and cultural aspects; third world
agricultural systems; and remote sensing. Professor Laney is the Western
Regional Councilor for the Cultural Ecology Specialty Group of the Association
of American Geographers. Laney was a Peace Corp Volunteer in the Democratic
Republic of Congo between 1987 - 1990.
Geography Department
Sonoma State University
laney@SONOMA.EDU
Peggy
Macaulay teaches Health, Economics, Modern World History and Nutritional
Sciences at Country High School in Vacaville.
Country High School
Vacaville Unified School District
peggym@vusd.solanocoe.k12.ca.us
Robin
Marsh is the Academic Coordinator of of the Center for Sustainable
Resource Development, College of Natural Resources, U.C. Berkeley. She
is also the Co-director of the Beahrs Environmental Leadership Program
that brings environmental and sustainable development professionals and
activists to U.C. Berkeley every summer for an intensive, interactive
course in Sustainable Environmental Management. Dr. Marsh is an agricultural
and development economist (Ph.D., Food Research Institute, Stanford University
1991), with 15 years of experience in international development. Before
joining CSRD in 2000, she worked with the Rural Development Division,
Food and Agriculture Organization, Rome, leading a global research and
policy program on the dynamic interactions between household livelihood
strategies, food security and local institutions. Previously, Dr. Marsh
was socio-economist with the Asian Vegetable Research and Development
Center (CGIAR associate center) in Taiwan and Costa Rica. She conducted
research in Asia and Central America on the economic and food security
benefits of home and market gardening, and evaluated urban horticulture
projects in Africa.
Center for Sustainable Resource Development
U. C. Berkeley
rmarsh@nature.berkeley.edu
Anuradha
Mittal is the Co-Director of the Institute for Food and Development
Policy, also known as Food First. Food First is a leading progressive
think tank and education-for-action center focusing on food as a human
right. She is the co-editor of America Needs Human Rights (Food First
Books, 1999). Her articles and opinion pieces on trade, women in development
and food security have appeared in numerous national and international
news papers and journals.
Food First: Institute for Food and Development
Policy
amittal@foodfirst.org
Carol
Murphey is a curriculum specialist with the Bay Area Global Education
Program at the World Affairs Council of Northern California.
Bay Area Global Education Program
World Affairs Council of Northern California
camup@aol.com
Sanjyot
Mehendale is the executive director of the Caucasus and Central Asia
Program within the Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
at U. C. Berkeley. A lecturer on Near Eastern Archaeology with the Department
of Near Eastern Studies, she is a specialist in the art and archeology
of the Silk Roads and has conducted extensive field research in Central
Asia. She is the director of the Uzbek Berkeley Archaeological Mission
(UBAM), is involved with the Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative at Berkeley,
and is one of two editors for the Cultural Atlas of the Silk Roads.
Institute of Slavic, East European, and
Eurasian Studies
U. C. Berkeley
sanjyotm@uclink4.berkeley.edu
Dr.
Jennifer Michael is a folklorist who has written on international
and American foodways. She is the Folk Arts Coordinator in the Department
of Anthropology at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco
and a lecturer in the American Studies Department at U. C. Berkeley.
Dept. of Anthropology, California Academy
of Sciences
American Studies Department, U. C. Berkeley
mireio@earthlink.net
Priti
Ramamurthy is an assistant professor at University of Washington's
Women's Studies Department. Ramamurthy studies gender and agricultural
change in south India through research on feminist commodity chains, a
methodology she has pioneered. The relationship of gender, nationality
and race to socioeconomic inequality and international development are
her central concerns. Of her own students Ramamurthy says, "I want
them to learn how to read their lives in the context of world events."
Women's Studies Department
University of Washington
priti@u.washington.edu
Sara
Webster is a graduate student in the History Department at UC Berkeley.
Her dissertation examines the role of food, cafés and restaurants
as a site of upward mobility for British immigrants.
History Department
U. C. Berkeley
sarasweb@socrates.berkeley.edu
William
T. Whitehead is a graduate student in Archaeology at U. C. Berkeley.
He is research focuses on the emergence of agriculture in South America:
Isotope fractionation of carbon and nitrogen in human diets, identification
of ancient plant remains, domestication of plants, the emergence of agriculture,
integration of digital technologies in archaeology.
Anthropology Department
U. C. Berkeley
whitehea@sscl.berkeley.edu
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