Results 51 to 60 of about 11,001 (118)

“They Speak Our Language!”: A Kinship Anthropology of Policing and Oversight in Kenya

open access: yesPoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, Volume 49, Issue 1, May 2026.
ABSTRACT This article introduces a kinship anthropology of policing framework to analyze the complexities and contestedness of police reform trajectories. Kinship is approached in a processual sense, made through practices and performances, and I contend that police officers act as a kin‐like group who engage in kinning.
Tessa Diphoorn
wiley   +1 more source

Using Celebrity to Advance Equality

open access: yes
Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
Alfred Archer
wiley   +1 more source

Digital Futures in an Ageing Society: Frontline Perspectives on Sociotechnical Imaginaries in Swedish Eldercare

open access: yesSociology of Health &Illness, Volume 48, Issue 3, March 2026.
ABSTRACT This article investigates how care professionals working with older adults in Sweden encounter, reproduce, and challenge sociotechnical imaginaries of a digitalised health and social care system. Drawing on interviews with 20 care professionals, we explore how promissory discourses that frame digitalisation as a solution to demographic and ...
Freja Morris   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Business of Belonging: Homocapitalism, Homonormativity and Cu/Queer Economic Geographies in São Paulo, Brazil

open access: yesAntipode, Volume 58, Issue 2, March 2026.
Abstract This paper examines corporate LGBTQ+ activism and the productive incorporation of queers into capitalism in Brazil. Mobilising transnational queer materialist critiques in tandem with critical perspectives from teoria do cu, the paper sheds light on how homonormativity operates not simply as a set of cultural norms or representational tropes ...
Olimpia Burchiellaro
wiley   +1 more source

Parenting Across Distances: Negotiation, Cooperation and Resistance Among Chinese Liushou (留守) Families

open access: yesChildren &Society, Volume 40, Issue 2, Page 291-300, March 2026.
ABSTRACT Based on 9 months of ethnographic research conducted in China, this study explores the experiences and attitudes of liushou children and their grandparents toward distant parenting, as well as the dynamic relationships they exhibit in interactions with migrant parents.
Kaidong Guo
wiley   +1 more source

Wibana: How Bobonaza Runa and Forest Animals Know and Live With Each Other

open access: yesThe Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, Volume 31, Issue 1, March 2026.
ABSTRACT Runa women living along the Bobonaza river in the Ecuadorian Amazon raise captured forest animals, in a practice called wibana. Runa women are attentive to the particular ways the wiba (raised) animals interface with the world, and learn the wibas’ communicative repertoires and are able to “read” what wibas sense in the forest, including ...
James Beveridge
wiley   +1 more source

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