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Matthew Abel Selected for Fulbright to Brazil

May 28, 2025 — Assistant Professor Matthew Abel has been selected for a 2025-2026 Fulbright US Scholar Award to Brazil. For his project, “Brazil’s Northern Arc: Transnational Grain Trading and the Forest’s New Fate,Abel will give public lectures at the Federal University of Pará (Universidade Federal do Pará – UFPA) in the eastern Amazonian city of Belém while conducting research on recent investments in bulk grain trading in the eastern Amazon and their implications for conservation and international climate policy. Between September and December 2025, he will collaborate with the anthropologist Dr. Katiane Silva and other researchers at UFPA’s Institute of Philosophy and the Human Sciences while conducting ethnographic interviews at one of the largest industrial export poles in the eastern Amazon. He will also help organize outreach events related to the thirtieth annual UN Climate Change Conference, which will take place in Belém in November.

Brazil is one of the five largest agricultural exporters in the world and competes directly with the United States in global markets for bulk grains and livestock feed. In the 1990s and 2000s, the expansion of industrial farming methods throughout the country’s central-western agricultural belt fueled growth in the national agribusiness sector. Despite its rapid ascendance as a global agricultural powerhouse, however, Brazil has also sought to maintain its position as an important player in the international environmental movement and leader in climate policy negotiations. Brazil is home to approximately 60% of the Amazon rainforest, and in 1992 hosted one of the most important international environmental governance efforts of the twentieth century: the 1992 Rio Earth Summit. This was the meeting where world leaders laid out the basic framework for international climate negotiations, known as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Proponents of the “Northern Arc”–a development scheme and the focus of Abel’s research–contend that, like the Mississippi in the US, the Amazon is well-suited for redevelopment as an agricultural export hub that will refocus development attention away from environmentally destructive roadways towards less carbon-intensive forms of river transport. However, environmentalists argue exactly the opposite–that the Northern Arc has incentivized land speculation, catalyzing a new cycle of frontier development with potentially catastrophic outcomes for the region.

The Fulbright Program is a cultural exchange program that supports international research and education. SMU’s Department of Anthropology’s other recent recipients include Kelly McKowen (Norway, 2023-2024) and Maryann R. Cairns (North Macedonia, 2020-2021).

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Health and Society Students Win Three “M” Awards, Umphrey Lee Award

May 2, 2025 — The SMU Division of Student Affairs has announced the winners of the 2024-2025 Hilltop Excellence Awards, and the Department of Anthropology’s Health and Society Majors are well-represented. Three of ten campus-wide “M” Awards, the university’s highest recognition, were awarded to Health and Society Majors: Jonathan Liu, Pareeni Shah, and Vivian Thai. Another Health and Society Major, Kyra Oladeji, won the Umphrey Lee Award, which “is presented annually to a graduating senior who has demonstrated outstanding involvement in and contribution to the University community while a student at SMU.”

The department congratulates these students on their well-deserved honors!

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Elizabeth Berk Wins SMU Excellence in Mentoring Award

Apr. 29, 2025 — Each year, SMU’s Office of Engaged Learning selects two faculty members for Excellence in Mentoring Awards. Recipients of the Excellence in Mentoring Award are nominated by their mentees.

We are delighted to share that one of the 2024-2025 winners is Anthropology’s Elizabeth Berk. We congratulate her on this well-deserved recognition of her outstanding advising!

 

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David J. Meltzer Receives 2025 Fryxell Award for Interdisciplinary Research

Apr. 22, 2025 — Each year, the Society for American Archaeology (SAA) presents the Fryxell Award, an honor given “in recognition of interdisciplinary excellence.” The SAA has announced that the 2025 recipient is David J. Meltzer, Henderson-Morrison Professor of Prehistory. Meltzer will receive his award and be honored with a half-day symposium this week in Denver at the SAA’s 90th Annual Meeting. The department congratulates Professor Meltzer on this well-deserved celebration of his scholarship!

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Karen Lupo Named University Distinguished Professor

Mar. 24, 2025 — Every five years, SMU selects a small cohort of acclaimed faculty to be designated University Distinguished Professors. These professors are granted an annual $10,000 research fund for the next five years.

The department is delighted to share that Karen D. Lupo has been selected for this honor and will be a University Distinguished Professor for the 2025-2030 term. We congratulate Dr. Lupo on this well-deserved celebration of her contributions.

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David Meltzer Receives 2025 Faculty Career Achievement Award

Mar. 24, 2025 — In recognition of his enormous impact on SMU, David J. Meltzer has been awarded the university’s 2025 Faculty Career Achievement Award. At the award ceremony, which was held this afternoon in the Hughes Trigg Ballroom, President R. Gerald Turner and Provost Elizabeth Loboa praised Meltzer for his extraordinary scholarship, teaching, and leadership.

Meltzer joined the faculty at SMU in 1984, shortly after receiving his PhD at the University of Washington. He is currently the Henderson-Morrison Professor of Prehistory and Executive Director of the Quest Archaeological Research Program. In addition, he is an Affiliate Professor in Prehistory, Climate and Environment, at the Centre for GeoGenetics, Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1989), a Member of the National Academy of Sciences (2009), a Member of the Academy of Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas (2009), and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2013). He is also the winner of the Society for American Archaeology’s 2025 Fryxell Award for Interdisciplinary Research.

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Profs. Adler and Myers Receive Dean’s Research Council Grants

Mar. 21, 2025 — Among the recipients of this year’s Dean’s Research Council (DRC) grants are two Anthropology faculty. Michael A. Adler has been awarded funding for his new project, “The Glaze Ware Conundrum: Picuris Pueblo’s Role in Rio Grande Glaze Ware Production and Exchange, 1325-1700 A.D.” Neely Laurenzo Myers will use her grant for “Strengthening an Application to Design and Test a Safe and Fun Generative AI Companion for Youth Mental Health.”

The department, which was the only one to win multiple awards, congratulates Profs. Adler and Myers! 

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Erik Schlicht Receives NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

Sept. 18, 2024 — Anthropology graduate student Erik Schlicht has been awarded the National Science Foundation’s Graduate Research Fellowship. The fellowship provides three years of funding for his coursework and dissertation on Indigenous uses of fire in managing the landscape of the Sierra Nevada.