NEAA Publications

NEAA Bulletin

The NEAA Bulletin is a peer-reviewed series published regularly by the Northeastern Anthropological Association. The Bulletin is designed to promote and disseminate original high quality anthropological scholarship conducted by practitioners situated regionally in the Northeastern United States. The series is intended for professional anthropologists and students. The NEAA Bulletin publishes research covering the traditional four fields of anthropology as well as applied work.

Aims and Scope

The NEAA Bulletin is a peer-reviewed series published regularly by the Northeastern Anthropological Association. The Bulletin is designed to promote and disseminate original high quality anthropological scholarship conducted by practitioners situated regionally in the Northeastern United States. The series is intended for professional anthropologists and students. The NEAA Bulletin publishes research covering the traditional four fields of anthropology as well as applied work.

If you are interested in serving as a Guest Editor for a future special issue of the NEAA Bulletin, please contact Editor-in-Chief, Anne M. Galvin (Galvina@stjohns.edu) to discuss proposed themes.

Issues

2020, "Undergrads in the Workplace: The Many Hats of Anthropology Alumni"
Jessica Skolnikoff and Bridget Fitzpatrick, Editors

Order a hardcopy or download a digital copy.

Fall 2011, "Borders, Margins, & Passages"
Anne M. Galvin, Guest-Editor

  • Boundedness and Mobility: New Approaches to the Study of Culture in an Era of Globalization, Anne M. Galvin, St. John’s University

  • Lines Across The Water: The Lasting Power of Colonial Borders in Maritime Southeast Asia, Charles O. Frake, SUNY Buffalo

  • Waste in the Margins of the State: Negative Externalities and the Production of the U.S.–Mexico Border Region, Suzanne Simon, University Of North Florida

  • The Rise of the “Guru Cool”: Global Crossings of the New (Age) Gurus, Denise Nuttall, Ithaca College

  • Ahmadi Muslims in the United States: Negotiating Missionary Work and Religious Sustainability, Amanda J. Buonopane, SUNY Buffalo

  • Accumulation, War, and Dispossession: Burkinabé Repatriates’ Problematic Reincorporation in the Homeland, Kathryn V. Boswell, Bard College At Simon’s Rock

  • Governing the Margins: Crime Containment and Community Development in Kingston, Jamaica, Anne M. Galvin, St. John’s University

  • What would Krishna Say to Shakespeare? Interculturalism and Performance in India, William Landon, Independent Researcher

Order a hardcopy or download a digital copy.


Winning Student Papers

Each year the NEAA awards prizes of $200 each to the best graduate and undergraduate papers presented at the annual meeting. Separate awards of $200 are also given for the best undergraduate and graduate student poster papers.