Professor Stephen Grant Baines: o poder das redes internacionais.

Autores

  • Bruce Granville Miller University of British Columbia, Department of Anthropology. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4000/12e83

Palavras-chave:

PPGAS 50 Years, Stephen Baines, Comment

Resumo

O ensaio de Stephen Grant Baines revela uma carreira excepcionalmente energética na antropologia, focando no que eu chamo de "antropologia útil", que aborda dilemas enfrentados por pessoas e comunidades reais na atualidade. Ele faz isso utilizando métodos e teorias antropológicos convencionais, em particular o trabalho de campo etnográfico, em uma ampla variedade de locais, incluindo prisões, comunidades indígenas rurais, ambientes urbanos, escritórios governamentais e muitos outros. Seu objetivo, em um dos ramos de seu trabalho, não tem sido estudar as culturas indígenas do Brasil, mas sim vê-las em relação à nação, à lei e à indústria. Acredito que sua abordagem teórica destaca os esforços para compreender essas relações.

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Biografia do Autor

Bruce Granville Miller, University of British Columbia, Department of Anthropology. Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Bruce Miller has been a professor at UBC since 1990. His research concerns Indigenous peoples and their relations with the state in its various local, national, and international manifestations. In recent years his work has particularly over- lapped with colleagues in archaeology and in law. He is member of the board of the Museum of Vancouver and chair of the col- lections committee, which has initiated a progressive program of repatriation to First Nations. From 1995-98 he was Anglophone Editor of Culture, the journal of the Canadian Anthropology Society.

Referências

Baines, Stephen Grant, and Bruce Granville Miller, eds. 2021. “Indigenous Peoples, Tribunals, Prisons, and Legal and Public Processes in Brazil and Canada.” Vibrant 18. Virtual Brazilian Anthropology. http://doi.org/10.1590/1809-43412021v18a701

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2001. The Problem of Justice: Tradition and Law in the Coast Salish World. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2004. Invisible Indigenes: The Politics of Non-Recognition. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2011. Oral History on Trial: Recognizing Aboriginal Narratives in the Courts. Vancouver: UBC Press. https://doi.org/10.59962/9780774820721

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2021. “‘Thinning’ Anthropological Expert Testimony.” Anthropology Now 13, no. 2: 30–40. https://doi.org/10.1080/19428200.2021.1976500

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2022. “In support of Free-Standing Indigenous Legal Systems: Comparisons of US Tribal Courts and Canadian First Nations Courts.” Journal of Legal Anthropology 6, no. 2: 93–109.

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2023. Witness to the Human Rights Tribunals: How the System Fails Indigenous Peoples. Vancouver: UBC Press. https://doi.org/10.59962/9780774867771

Miller, Bruce Granville, and Stephen Baines. 2019. Session co-organizer, with Stephen Baines, CASCA/AAA Annual Meetings “Indigenous Peoples, tribunals, prisons, and legal and public processes.” November 23, 2019. Co-sponsored by Canadian Anthropology Society (CASCA)/, American Anthropology Association (AAA). Vancouver, BC.

Miller, Bruce Granville, and Stephen Baines. 2021. Table Ronde/Roundtable – Enchevêtrement dans les processus judiciaires entre États et autochtones/Entanglement in State-Indigenous legal processes. Co-chairs: Bruce Granville Miller (University of British Columbia); Stephen Baines (University of Brasilia). CASCA virtual conference, Guelph, Ontario.

Miller, Bruce Granville, and Gustavo Menezes. 2015. “Anthropological Experts and the Legal System: Brazil and Canada.” American Indian Quarterly 39, no. 4: 391–430.

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Publicado

2024-09-30

Como Citar

Miller, Bruce Granville. 2024. “Professor Stephen Grant Baines: O Poder Das Redes Internacionais”. Anuário Antropológico 49 (2):e-12467. https://doi.org/10.4000/12e83.

Edição

Seção

PPGAS 50 Anos