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Environmental anthropology is a sub-discipline of anthropology that examines the complex relationships between humans and the environments which they inhabit. [1]
Environmental Anthropology track focuses on the dynamic relationship between the human organism and its natural and social environment.
Environmental anthropology is a subfield of anthropology that explores the complex interactions between humans and their natural environment. It encompasses a broad range of topics, including cultural beliefs and practices, political and economic systems, and ecological processes.
Our brief overview of developments in environmental anthropology since 1980 and their antecedents is organized around three themes: systems ecology, political ecology, and cognitive science. In some areas, the context is familiar.
Environmental Anthropology is a thematic concentration that investigates how human societies create and change geologies and climates up to a planetary scale, and the ways that anthropologists have questioned the division between cultures and nature.
Environmental anthropology brings together faculty with specialties in the anthropology of science, archeology, heritage studies, medical anthropology, political ecology, and political economy.
Environmental anthropology is a sub-specialty within the field of anthropology that takes an active role in examining the relationships between humans and their environment across space and time.