
| Glenn Davis Stone |
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Neil Schoenherr News Writer; Assoc. Record Editor nschoenherr@wustl.edu (314) 935-5235 |
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Stone's Nigerian research examined social and agricultural change among Kofyar and Tiv populations during 40 years of rising population density. He used the Kofyar's archetypal example of intensification to study social organization of labor and landscape in a highly productive, sustainable system. Comparative research on Tiv showed different responses to land scarcity, including belligerence and the manipulation of local political processes to avoid intensification. A larger aim of this work has been development of stronger models of agricultural change that recognize cultural context and agency.
His work on Ancestral Puebloans (Anasazis) concerns political and agricultural responses to population increase over longer time spans. This work also provided a model of ecological parameters of intensification.
His present work focuses on agricultural biotechnology, especially a set of issues relating to the introduction of genetically modified crops in developing countries. He recently completed a semester of work in a laboratory specializing in transformation of tropical subsistence crops, and has begun a large NSF-sponsored project on information flow, farmer skill, and the political ecology of genetically modified crops in southern India.
Apart from India, Stone maintains a real interest in contemporary subSaharan Africa and the prehistoric American Southwest; however his work is on processes that occur worldwide, and he works with students conducting research in diverse areas. Methodologically his work has included archaeological fieldwork and excavation, archival research, ethnography, intensive use of computers (including current interests in innovative forms of web-based research), and remote sensing data.
Courses
Biotechnology (Brave New Crops), Culture and Environment, Political Ecology, Quantitative Methods, Peoples & Cultures of Africa, Proposal Writing
Selected Publications
2005 A Science of the Gray: Malthus, Marx, and the Ethics of Studying Crop Biotechnology. In Embedding Ethics: Shifting Boundaries of the Anthropological Profession, ed. L. Meskell and P. Pels, pp. 197-217. Berg, Oxford. [pdf]
2004 Biotechnology and the Political Ecology of Information in India. Human Organization 63:127-140 [html, pdf]
2002 Both Sides Now: Fallacies in the Genetic-Modification Wars, Implications for Developing Countries, and Anthropological Perspectives. Current Anthropology, 43(4):611-630 (a CA enhanced online article; pdf file with separate backgrounder available locally).
2002 Biotechnology and Suicide in India. Anthropology News 43(5):5. [html]
2001 Theory of the Square Chicken: Advances in Agricultural Intensification Theory. Asia Pacific Viewpoint 42:163-180. [pdf]
2001 Agricultural Change Theory. In International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, ed. N. Smelser and P. Baltes, pp. 329-333. Pergamon, Oxford. [pdf]
1999 (Stone, G.D. and C.E. Downum) Non-Boserupian Ecology and Agricultural Risk: Ethnic Politics and Land Control in the Arid Southwest. American Anthropologist 101:113-128. (GORDON WILLEY AWARD, 2000) [html, pdf]
1998 Keeping the Home Fires Burning: The Changed Nature of Householding in the Kofyar Homeland. Human Ecology 26:239-265. [pdf]
1997 Predatory Sedentism: Intimidation and Intensification in the Nigerian Savanna. Human Ecology 25:223-242. [pdf]
1996 Settlement Ecology: The Social and Spatial Organization of Kofyar Agriculture. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.
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