
Anthropology of Work Review
Edited by:
Michael Chibnik
The Anthropology of Work Review is the publication of the Society for the Anthropology of Work, which is a section of the American Anthropological Association. The goal of the journal is to publish research that will facilitate exchanges between those engaged in the study of all dimensions of human work. Articles and photo essays are welcomed from those working inside and outside academic contexts, from all nations and from all subfields and areas of specialty within anthropology. Theoretical and methodological discussions of the study of work and its contexts are encouraged, including interdisciplinary, collaborative, and student submissions.
TopNews and Announcements
Anthropology of Work Review is one of more than 20 publications featured in AnthroSource, the American Anthropological Association's online portal serving the research, teaching, and professional needs of anthropologists. Click here to learn more about AnthroSource!
Anthropology of Work Review is included in the INASP, HINARI and OARE programs. As a part of these initiatives, the journal is available (for free or at very low cost) in more than 100 developing world countries.
NIH Public Access Mandate
For those interested in the Wiley-Blackwell policy on the NIH Public Access Mandate, please visit our policy statement.
TopHighlights
Read the most downloaded articles in 2009 from Anthropology of Work Review:
Can a Plantation be Fair? Paradoxes and Possibilities in Fair Trade Darjeeling Tea Certification
Sarah Besky
Anthropology of Work Newsletter
1980
Downsizing Masculinity: Gender, Family, and Fatherhood in Post-Industrial America
Chad Broughton
Knowledge, Skill, and the Inculcation of the Anthropologist: Reflections on Learning to Sew in the Field
Rebecca Prentice
Introduction to Special Issue "Embodying Labor: Work as Fieldwork"
Rebecca Prentice, Gavin Hamilton Whitelaw
Identity as Work: Changing Job Opportunities and Indigenous Identity in the Transition to a Tourist Economy
Karen Stocker
Informal and Illicit Entrepreneurs: Fighting for a Place in the Neoliberal Economic Order
Rebecca B. Galemba
Learning from Small Change: Clerkship and the Labors of Convenience
Gavin Hamilton Whitelaw
Making Trash into Treasure: Struggles for Autonomy on a Brazilian Garbage Dump
Kathleen Millar
Industrial Anthropology in Argentina
Nuria Inés Giniger
