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Biological anthropology

About: Biological anthropology is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1126 publications have been published within this topic receiving 12757 citations. The topic is also known as: biological anthropology & somatology.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By examining ancestry through two related lenses, genealogical and genetic, it is shown that the coherence of race as a biological concept has been disrupted by demographic changes in the authors' recent evolutionary past.
Abstract: For more than 50 years, biological anthropology has argued against the use of the biological race concept. Despite such efforts, aspects of the concept remain in circulation within society and with...

14 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This essay argues that Biological Anthropology has much to offer, a history to contend with, and a future that matters, and highlights theoretical and methodological issues in genomics, evolutionary theory and connect them to the study of Race and Racism to emphasize specific arenas where Biological anthropology has a great capacity and a strong obligation to play a central role.
Abstract: Biological anthropology can, and should, matter in the Anthropocene. Biological anthropologists are interested in human biology and the human experience in a broader ecological, evolutionary, and phylogenetic context. We are interested in the material of the body, the history of the body, and interactions of diverse bodies, communities, ecologies, and evolutionary processes. However, the cultural realities of bodies, histories, communities, livelihoods, perceptions, and experiences are as central to the endeavor and inquiry of biological anthropology as are their material aspects. Biological anthropology is a constant dialectic between the cultural and the biological. In this essay, I argue that Biological Anthropology has much to offer, a history to contend with, and a future that matters. To illustrate this, I highlight theoretical and methodological issues in genomics, evolutionary theory and connect them to the study of Race and Racism to emphasize specific arenas where Biological Anthropology has a great capacity, and a strong obligation, to play a central role. However, Biological Anthropology also has substantive internal issues that hinder our ability to do the best possible science. If we are to live up to our potential and make a difference in the 21st century we need to ameliorate our structural shortcomings and expand our voice, and impact, in academic and public discourse. The goal of this perspective is to offer suggestions for moving us toward this goal.

14 citations

Book
01 Jan 1979

13 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Feb 2008
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the growth of dental anthropology during the twentieth century and comment on potential directions in the twenty-first century, and encourage other workers to document the history of the field in their country or region.
Abstract: Introduction In 1991, Albert A. Dahlberg wrote “Historical perspective of dental anthropology” for the volume Advances in Dental Anthropology (Kelley and Larsen, 1991). A few years later, the senior author (Scott, 1997) wrote an historical paper on “Dental anthropology” for Frank Spencer's 1997 edited volume on the History of Physical Anthropology . Dahlberg was both a dentist and a pioneer in the field of dental anthropology. Because of those two abiding interests, his historical treatment focused as much on developments in oral biology as on the history of dental anthropology per se. Scott, a physical anthropologist, dealt with the early history of dental research, but the overall focus of his article revolved around the manner in which teeth have been used in anthropological research. Given the recency of these two articles, we do not want to simply reiterate points already made. Moreover, in no way is this general contribution comparable to articles on the history of dental anthropology in circumscribed geographic areas, such as those written for Australia (Brown, 1992, 1998) and Hungary (Kosa, 1993). We applaud these efforts and encourage other workers to document the history of the field in their country or region. Our goal is to focus broadly on the growth of dental anthropology during the twentieth century and comment on potential directions in the twenty-first century.

13 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202322
202245
202111
202016
201921
201832