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Christine M. Beitl

Christine is a doctoral student in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Georgia. Her general area of interest is in the interface between conservation and development in neotropical and coastal areas of Latin America. Currently, one of her primary concerns is about the shifting patterns of resource use in mangrove ecosystems of coastal Ecuador, where urbanization and shrimp farming are among the major agents of change in local livelihoods, social relations, and local ecology.

Other areas of interest include maritime and coastal anthropology, political ecology, anthropology of development, economic anthropology, migration, conservation, and community-based natural resource management.

Christine received an M.A. in Latin American Studies with a concentration in Environmental Studies from Florida International University. She has conducted research in Ecuador, Mexico, Dominican Republic, and Bolivia. Her Master’s thesis examined grassroots organization for a community-based ecotourism enterprise as a component of the larger Community Tropical Ecosystem Management Project in Quintana Roo, Mexico. At the Biblioteca Inca in Cochabamba, Bolivia, she studied community-based conservation and natural resource management in the Bolivian Amazon. In the Dominican Republic, she investigated labor and living conditions among Haitian migrants in the Dominican sugar industry.

Christine has been a teaching assistant for courses in anthropology, environmental studies, and Latin American politics. She is currently Managing Editor for Ecological and Environmental Anthropology, an online, peer-reviewed publication housed within the Department of Anthropology at UGA. Before pursuing her Master’s degree, she dedicated her professional life to international education, working as a Study Abroad Advisor and Coordinator for the College Consortium for International Studies (CCIS) programs in Ecuador and Greece.

Christine obtained her B.A. in Spanish from Ohio University. The roots of her interest in Ecuador and in environmental and ecological anthropology can be traced back to her undergraduate internship at the Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas y Censos del Ecuador where she investigated economic development and demography in “Los Guasmos” of Guayaquil.


 
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Shiloh Moates

Shiloh is a PhD student in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Georgia. He received a double BA from Radford University in Spanish and Anthropology in 1999. Shortly thereafter he continued to pursue his interests in anthropology at the University of Maryland at College Park where he received a Master’s of Applied Anthropology focusing on Human Biology and Human/Plant interactions.

Having grown up on an organic farm in the rural mountains of Virginia he has a special interest in agriculture. When he was fifteen years old he volunteered on an experimental farm in South Africa along side the AmaXhosa people. This early experience abroad was fundamental to Shiloh ’s pursuit of the study of human diversity. He has also spent over three years in Latin America studying and working. Before entering the program at The University of Georgia he worked on the USAID funded SANREM (Sustainable Agriculture and Natural Resource Management) project in the Highlands of Ecuador as the Project Coordinator and On-site Research Manager. His research looks at urban agriculture as a mechanism for community building in the states and for increasing food security in the global arena. Other interests include human migration, visual anthropology and the use of appropriate technology.


 
 
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I am a doctoral student in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Georgia. My research interests are encompassed by three topical areas: the human ecology of Southeast Asia, sustainable mountain agriculture, and the anthropology of conservation. For my dissertation research, I plan to examine the social, economic, and environmental impact of coffee production in the Viet Nam highlands, which has increased greatly in the past decade, making Viet Nam the world's second largest exporter of coffee. The social, economic, and environmental effects of rapid development of coffee production in the central highlands of Viet Nam will form the general basis of my research.

I am interested in working in the highlands of Viet Nam to study the activity of small-scale coffee farmers. What has been the social, economical, and environmental impact from the practice of swidden agriculture to intensive coffee production? Environmental concerns with this transition include soil erosion, nutrient depletion from perpetual use of the soil, and likely decreased bird and fauna populations from its surrounding forests. In addition to the environmental impacts, I am interested in studying the socio-economic factors in the transition of the hill tribes and the influx of Kinh groups to the central highlands. The loss of forests and fallow fields to coffee production has caused tension between the hill tribes and Kinh farmers resulting in protests in 2001. The Vietnamese increase in coffee production has dramatically dropped the world market price for coffee creating financial difficulty across the highlands in general and this has been doubly so for small-scale coffee farmers.

The Vietnamese government, due to the market crash in coffee prices, has attempted to encourage coffee farmers to move away from the lower value crop Coffea robusta, to the higher value crop Coffea arabica. However, coffee farmers have been slow to switch over their crops due to the initial growth lag in coffee plants to reach peak production and viabable economic returns. An important component of my research will investigate the biodiversity of homegardens associated with highland coffee production in Viet Nam .

Before beginning my education at UGA, I received a M.A. in Anthropology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (2003). My master's thesis entitled “Vietnamese Homegardens of Lincoln, Nebraska: A Measure of Cultural Continuity,” analyzed the Vietnamese Diaspora foodways through vegetable gardens. I also earned a BS in Zoology from the University of California in Santa Barbara (1996).

In addition to my interests in ethnobotany and agriculture, I have a broad array of experience in anthropology. My experiences include teaching Cultural Anthropology at the College of Eastern Utah, conduction cultural resources inventories and archiving southwest artifacts in Utah, conducting HIV transmission research as an applied anthropologist in Nebraska , and co-organizing the High Plains Applied Anthropology conference. These experiences have helped to form my holistic interests of the social and physical environment that encompasses human interaction.

 
 
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Alumni

 

Graudate Students

Edward Reep (Ph.D.1998)
Greg Guest (Ph.D. 2000)
Neeraj Vedwan (Ph.D. 2001): at the Montclair State University
Will Van de Berg (Ph.D. 2002)
Eric Jones (Ph.D.2002)
Chris Tarnowski (Ph.D.2002)
Brian Campbell (Ph.D. 2005)
Hari Gurung (Ph.D. 2005)
Todd Crane (Ph.D. 2006)
David Greenawalt (Ph.D. 2006)
Milan Shrestha (Ph.D. 2007)
Govinda Basnet (Ph.D. 2007)

Post-Docs

Shankar Talawar 1996-98
Ram Chhetri 1998-99; 2002 (Fulbright on two occasions)

 


A Message to Prospective Graduate Students

I am always interested in serving as major professor for hard-working and enthusiastic graduate students. My main interests are ecological anthropology, agricultural anthropology, comparative study of mountains, natural resource management, climate change, and international migration. Over the past 10 years, many PhD students have worked closely with me on my funded projects in the Andes, Himalaya, and the US South (see research projects in my webpage). In addition, students have secured their own funding through such sources as National Science Foundation, NASA, and Wenner-Gren Foundation. My PhD students who have already graduated are now employed in academic positions as well as government and non-governmental service.

In my laboratory at UGA, students will have access to a state-of-the art facility for GIS and database analysis. The lab headquarters two global information projects (World Geography of the Peanut and World Geography of the Potato) which have provided both funding and experience for students. Those students interested in agricultural anthropology have experienced hands-on research on my 320 acre Agrarian Connections Farm located in Oglethorpe County, Georgia. In this context, we apply in the real world (and in the real soil) the ideas of anthropology. Projects on the farm include the Southern Seed Legacy and the Georgia Log Cabin project.

If you are interested in working with me, please send me a message and we can discuss the possibilities and opportunities.

 
 
 
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