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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Anthropologist David Price draws on archival materials\, oral h
 istory interviews\, as well as extensive documents released under the Free
 dom of Information Act (FOIA) to consider the impacts of a wide variety of
  historical interactions between anthropologists and American military and
  intelligence agencies. Discussing FBI and CIA FOIA documents\, Price summ
 arizes some of the recurrent political and structural issues that have his
 torically restricted the types of impacts that anthropologists and other s
 ocial scientists have been able to enact in the civilian\, military and in
 telligence agencies where they have worked. Price also draws on FOIA FBI d
 ocuments to consider how narrowly confined constructions of acceptable pol
 itical perspectives have traditionally been used by the FBI in governmenta
 l vetting procedures to limit the sort of views allowed to contribute to p
 olicy formation or in some instances\, to limit scholars' interactions wit
 h academic colleagues. David Price is a Professor of Anthropology at St. M
 artin's University in Lacey\, Washington where he teaches courses in anthr
 opology and social justice. He is writing a three volume series of books e
 xamining American anthropologists' interactions with intelligence agencies
 : Threatening Anthropology (2004\, Duke) examines McCarthyism's effects on
  anthropologists\, Anthropological Intelligence: The Deployment and Neglec
 t of American Anthropology in the Second World War (2008\, Duke) documents
  anthropological contributions to the Second World War\, and a third volum
 e will explore anthropologists’ interactions with the CIA and Pentagon dur
 ing the Cold War.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;
DTEND:20091001T200000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T083100Z
DTSTART:20091001T200000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Anthropological Engagements with Military and Intelligence Agencies
 : History\, Ethics\, Politics and Structural Limits
UID:RFCALITEM639140706605158842
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Anthropologist David Price draws on archival m
 aterials\, oral history interviews\, as well as extensive documents releas
 ed under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to consider the impacts of 
 a wide variety of historical interactions between anthropologists and Amer
 ican military and intelligence agencies. Discussing FBI and CIA FOIA docum
 ents\, Price summarizes some of the recurrent political and structural iss
 ues that have historically restricted the types of impacts that anthropolo
 gists and other social scientists have been able to enact in the civilian\
 , military and intelligence agencies where they have worked. Price also dr
 aws on FOIA FBI documents to consider how narrowly confined constructions 
 of acceptable political perspectives have traditionally been used by the F
 BI in governmental vetting procedures to limit the sort of views allowed t
 o contribute to policy formation or in some instances\, to limit scholars'
  interactions with academic colleagues. David Price is a Professor of Anth
 ropology at St. Martin's University in Lacey\, Washington where he teaches
  courses in anthropology and social justice. He is writing a three volume 
 series of books examining American anthropologists' interactions with inte
 lligence agencies: Threatening Anthropology (2004\, Duke) examines McCarth
 yism's effects on anthropologists\, Anthropological Intelligence: The Depl
 oyment and Neglect of American Anthropology in the Second World War (2008\
 , Duke) documents anthropological contributions to the Second World War\, 
 and a third volume will explore anthropologists’ interactions with the CIA
  and Pentagon during the Cold War.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;
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