Research Overview
Dive Deep. Faculty in the Department of Anthropology are internationally prominent for their research and publications on the New World, especially Mesoamerica, the Andes, and Amazonia. The department maintains research interests and active field programs in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Brazil, Bolivia, Columbia, Peru, Argentina, and Chile.
Archaeology
The Department of Anthropology is the principal center for archaeological research at Vanderbilt University, and our faculty and students conduct archaeological research in collaboration with a variety of centers and programs on campus.The department has an active and internationally renowned research profile. Some of the key research themes and projects are listed below.
Key Research Themes
- Space and landscape
- Urbanization
- Bioarchaeology
- Geoarchaeology
- Social complexity
- Colonialism and culture change
- Historical archaeology
Ongoing Projects
- Long-term human and environmental interactions on the north coast of Peru
- Mound-building and ethnoarchaeology among the Mapuche of south-central Chile
- Early complexity and urbanization in the Bolivian Highlands
- Provincial life under Inka rule and early missionary encounters in the southern Peruvian highlands
- Conquest-period urbanism and culture contact in Mexico and Central America
Cultural Anthropology
The department specializes in the cultural anthropology of Latin America, with thematic foci on issues of political economy, health, political violence, food politics, and cognitive anthropology. Ongoing projects examine the social basis of violence, identity, mortuary practices, land claims, export agriculture, language, culture, and cognition. The faculty are all engaged in long-term field research, receive funding from foundations and governmental sources, and actively publish their results.
Key Research Themes
- Medical anthropology
- Political economy
- Psychological anthropology
- Language and culture
- Cognitive anthropology
Ongoing Projects
- Interpersonal dimensions of peace in the Xingu basin
- Broccoli exports and ethnic relations in Guatemala
- Land claims among the Wari in Brazil
- Spatial and temporal cognition among the Tzeltal Maya
- Cultural Contexts of Health, Medical and Cultural Anthropology Project
- Birth politics in the Ecuadorian Amazon
- Reproductive health and religion in Tennessee
- Justice and violence in Bolivian prisons
Cognitive Research
Faculty in the department conduct cognitive research in collaboration with cognitive sciences scholars in psychology departments at Vanderbilt and other universities. Anthropology plays an important role in this research, as it offers perspectives from different cultures as well as a unique methodological and theoretical vantage point. One of the basic questions asked within this domain of anthropological inquiry is how the social environment and the mind interact to create both human cognition and culture. As such, the sub-field of cognitive anthropology is closely tied to ethnology as well as biological anthropology.
Research includes ethnographic approaches with experimental methods, statistical analyses, and computer modeling. Most of the work is carried out in Mexico and Guatemala, but collaborations with other departments and universities also include sites in North America and Indonesia.
Biological Anthropology
Research in biological anthropology within the Department of Anthropology at Vanderbilt encompasses human biology, bioarchaeology, global health, forensic science, human genetics, ancient DNA, epigenetics, data science, and more. Our faculty integrates field work, lab work, and transdisciplinary collaboration to examine the processes and mechanisms by which culture, society, political structure, environment, and lived experiences become embodied to shape health, physiological development, biological variation, and identity.
Key Research Themes
- Anthropological Bioarchaeology
- Forensic anthropology
- Human biology
- Health disparities
- Population genetics
- Ancient DNA (paleopathogenomics)
- Women’s reproductive health
Biological Anthropology Labs (Students can conduct Immersion Projects in these Labs)
- Bioarchaeology & Stable Isotope Research Lab (Tung Lab)
- Genetic Anthropology and Biocultural Studies Lab (Benn Torres Lab)
Ongoing Projects
- Race, genetic ancestry, and discourses of belonging in Puerto Rico
- Biosocial factors in Uterine Leiomyomas Disparities Study (BUiLD study)
- Bioarchaeology of Wari imperialism in the Peruvian Andes
- Diet and foodway studies among peoples of the pre-Hispanic Andes and Mayan regions of Mesoamerica
- Migration and diaspora studies of the pre-Hispanic Andes and Mayan regions of Mesoamerica
- Stable isotope analysis of unidentified victims of internal armed conflict in Colombia and Peru
- Family health, nutrition, and illness among Shodagor fishers in Bangladesh
- Genetic variation and cardiometabolic health in Dominica
- Biology of human thermoregulation
- Maternal health disparities in the US
- Cold case victim identification efforts across the southeastern US
- Capacity-building humanitarian education and research initiatives in Tanzania
Center and Program Partnerships
- Evolutionary Studies Initiative
- Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health
- Vanderbilt Genetics Institute
- Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies