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Course Criteria
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5.00 Credits
Techniques for interpreting data, organizing bibliographic material, writing, editing, and revising. Preparation of papers for conferences and publications in anthropology. 5 units, Aut (Staff)
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4.00 - 5.00 Credits
Opportunity for students to pursue their specialization in an institutional setting such as a laboratory, clinic, research institute, or government agency. May be repeated for credit 4-5 units, Aut (Staff), Win (Staff), Spr (Staff), Sum (Staff)
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2.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 299.) Techniques of interpreting data, organizing bibliographic materials, writing, editing and revising. Preparation of papers for conferences and publications in anthropology. Seniors register for 199; master's students register for 299. 1-2 units, not given this year
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5.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 1.) Crosscultural anthropological perspectives on human behavior, including cultural transmission, social organization, sex and gender, culture change, technology, war, ritual, and related topics. Case studies illustrating the principles of the cultural process. Films. 5 units, Win (Kapur, C)
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5.00 Credits
Anthropological approaches and contributions to the field. 5 units, not given this year Primarily for graduate students; undergraduates may enroll with consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 103.) Seminar. Urbanism as a defining feature of modern life. The perspective of archaeology on the history and development of urban cultures. Case studies are from around the globe; emphasis is on the San Francisco Bay Area megalopolis. Cities as cultural sites where economic, ethnic, and sexual differences are produced and transformed; spatial, material, and consumption practices; and the archaeology of communities and neighborhoods. 5 units, Spr (Voss, B)
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3.00 - 5.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 103A, ARCHLGY 101B, ARCHLGY 301B.) Perspectives, methods, and data that archaeology brings to human/environment interaction issues such as environmental variability and change, sustainability, and human impacts. How to use paleoenvironmental data in archaeological research; how to recover and analyze such data to reconstruct human/environment interactions in prehistory. 3-5 units, Spr (Contreras, D)
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3.00 - 5.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 105.) Preindustrial urbanism as exemplified by prehispanic New World societies. Case studies: the central and southern highlands of Mesoamerica, and the Maya region. Comparative material from highland S. America. 3-5 units, Win (Robertson, I)
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3.00 - 5.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 105A.) Recent developments showing a growing empowerment of Indigenous peoples and increased participation in the construction of democratic processes. Challenges to traditional state institutions; new worldviews based on cultural identity and ethnicity. Recent debates about special rights regarding territoriality and natural resources and other claims formulated by indigenous organizations to improve governance and implement a new type of citizen based on self-determination and the reorganization of the actual nation states. 3-5 units, Spr (Karp-Toledo, E)
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5.00 Credits
(Same as ANTHRO 6, BIO 106, HUMBIO 6.) The human fossil record from the first non-human primates in the late Cretaceous or early Paleocene, 80-65 million years ago, to the anatomically modern people in the late Pleistocene, between 100,000 to 50,000 B.C.E. Emphasis is on broad evolutionary trends and the natural selective forces behind them. 5 units, Win (Klein, R)
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