Takes From The Anthropocene

Get a fresh perspective on the biggest issues facing us and our planet right now—disasters, climate change, and global health crises. These short, lively podcasts convey student ideas springing from Professor Kate Browne’s Fall 2020 course, Public Anthropology. Public Anthropology takes academic anthropology to the streets where a broad public can access and digest what we have learned. The Anthropocene is the name for our current geologic era, uniquely marked by the reach of human impact into all parts of the planet and life here. Each podcast offers a fresh take from this new era, presenting valuable ideas and potential solutions. Have a listen!

Climate change, Displacement, and what to do about them

This episode from Claire Taagen in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines climate change, ideas of displacement and ways in which we can combat these rising global challenges.40% of the world's population is at risk of being impacted by sea-level rise. Taagen explains why western views of nature are harmful to the environment and human social justice, both directly and indirectly.Displacement is strongly impacted by environmental degradation, and displaced communities often struggle to survive and rebuild, while diseases often spread more quickly. Displacement is especially prevalent among Indigenous and low-income communities.Listen in for how large corporations and bureaucrats exacerbate these issues as well as how we can work to minimize them.

03-12
11:53

Promoting Health Care Access Requires More Diverse Voices

This episode from Roxanne Stacy in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines the importance of diversity in making global changes through health care. Stacy begins by introducing anthropologist Paul Farmer's book, "Mountain's Beyond Mountains." He acknowledges that the same health issues affect people differently depending on their access to healthcare. Stacey does not focus on poverty, but rather on how different demographics have different access to health care.This topic is especially relevant with the current pandemic. Even within the U.S., different regions and demographics have different levels of accessibility to health care and disaster recovery. One of the largest problems is that, even when recovery agencies try to step in to help, if they aren't familiar with the struggling community's culture, they can cause more damage than good. Listen in for how diversity in leadership can help prevent some of these major issues.

03-12
09:21

Water as a Human Right

This episode from Zoe Schutte in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines water as a human right and how trends and lenses about water have changed over time. Schutte begins by defining environmental justice before delving into environmental injustices around water. Certain communities are disproportionally impacted by water-related injustices, as exemplified by the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, and Bolivia. Listen in for an in-depth examination of these problems and some solutions to these major issues.

03-05
06:17

How Indigenous Strategies like Curated Burns can Save Our Forests

This episode from Althea Kress in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines farming practices and strategies that have been passed down through generations and how strategies such as curated burns can help save and preserve our forests. Recently, forest fires have been a major issue, and they are exacerbated by other human-caused issues like climate change. Kress gives insight about how the wisdom and passed-down experience of Indigenous communities can be used to prevent future disasters like the fires from the past year.

03-05
08:16

The Importance of Indigenous Elders and Their Knowledge

This episode from Ranae Call in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines the importance of Indigenous elders' knowledge and how their practices and techniques can benefit modern-day societies. Call discusses traditional ecological knowledge, what it means and how it can be applied. Alternative attitudes can also be useful to understanding and interacting with the environment. Listen in for more explanations and ways to remedy historical injustices against Indigenous elders and their knowledge.

03-04
07:28

The Best Answers Come From People Closest to the Problem

This episode from Ayman Aouinat in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines professionals in anthropology and how those closest to the issues are more likely to solve the issue at hand. Front and center is a government's responsibility to listen to its people. To exemplify this, Aouinat describes the U.S. government's response to issues, including pesticides and COVID-19. Also included is an example of Tuberculosis treatment from Peru. Aouinat closes by describing how Indigenous communities should be consulted for their knowledge on stewardship of the land. At the heart of this episode are the problems of ego and ignorance. Listen in for solutions.

03-04
11:29

What is Disaster Capitalism and Why Should we Care About It?

This episode from Olivia Heifetz in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines the idea of disaster capitalism. Heifetz proposes ways to view disaster capitalism and highlights who and what it affects the most. Heifetz collects numerous examples as to why humans should care about decorporatizing disaster and ways humans can move to prevent it in the future. Heifetz explains the difference between slow-onset and acute disasters and how they affect communities, both in the U.S. and abroad. Even disaster relief programs sometimes participate in disaster capitalism or disaster politics. Heifetz breaks down the difference and expands on where some of these disasters come from and suggests some possible solutions.

02-26
06:59

Conservation, climate change need new framing strategies

This episode from Charles Borngrebe in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines monumental current issues, such as conservation and climate change, and challenges the modern framing strategies that surround them. Borngrebe proposes new ways in which to think about these issues and highlights ways we can learn from our past. Particular focus is on conservation and economics of environmentalism as well as traditional Native American strategies to preserve the environment. Politics also has a strong framing power that has been used so far to shift public views on conservation with relation to economies and natural disasters.

02-26
09:09

How We Understand the Environment has Material Effects

This episode from Meriel Hahn in Fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines our current view of the world and ways in which we can move to understand this view and its effects better. Hahn's episode also touches on ways in which the human perception of the world has changed over the past few decades and speculates the real effect this change will have on humans. Hahn explains different takes on topics such as wilderness preserves and control over nature. Hahn defines the Anthropocene and what it means for the planet.

02-25
10:14

Ocean pollution from chemicals, solutions to save reefs

This episode from Ti Stroup in Fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University examines the rise of ocean pollution over the last few decades and some ways in which we can teach ourselves and future generations responsible practices and solutions to help preserve our world's largest bodies of water. This episode touches on significant issues such as pollution, run-off and how fast pollution can reach all ends of the earth. Stroup examines the reasons for the continued use of harmful pollutants, especially in government-regulated departments, as well as why preserving reefs is important for human communities. Stroup concludes with suggestions for ways to prevent damage from chemical pollution.

02-25
08:03

Indigenous v. Western Views of the Natural World

This episode from Jakob Corbin in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University discusses views of the natural world and compares Western European views to Indigenous views. The Western ideology sees the wilderness as something to be tamed or conquered, an idea that began with Catholicism. That ideology, coupled with capitalism, continues today and has major ramifications for how we live and manage ecosystems. From Indigenous points of view, the concept of the honorable harvest is prevalent, which requires a balance between humans and nature. Rather than conquerors, humans are stewards, and methods of stewardship that utilize this mentality allow for a more dynamic and healthy ecosystem. Listen in for an introduction to how these different understandings of humans' role in nature impact the environment.

02-19
12:30

Place, a Problematic American Mindset

In this episode, Cody Cooke in Fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University discusses his home in Louisiana and how place can become problematic for Americans. The American ethos sets an impossible focus on the future. Cooke discusses the cost of growth in America on local landscapes and communities, using the example of fossil fuels. Listen in to find out how this mentality affects how we think about the places we live as well as alternative mentalities.

02-19
20:32

How Better Framing, with a Little Help from Public Anthropologists, Can Help Solve Big Problems

In this episode, Amanda Kowalski in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University discusses the light that public anthropologists can shed on framing and how it can benefit all. The 2020 presidential debates sparked a question in Kowalski: Why are some big issues still not understood by the public? From climate change to chemicals, Kowalski describes the disconnect between academia and the public and how different framing of information can shape people’s worldviews. Kowalski examines two key ideals in American culture: Nature is separate from humans, and humans must control nature. So what happens when research collides with popular framing? What happens when previous framing assigns a negative stigma to a phrase or topic? And is there a way to work around established framing? Kowalski examines these questions and more.

02-18
14:31

Slow, subversive damage: Is structural violence real?

In this episode, Fisher FitzRandolph in fall 2020’s ANTH 405, Public Anthropology and Global Environmental Challenges, class at Colorado State University discusses the issue of structural violence. FitzRandodlf initially frames the topic around a story from Haiti, but the explanation quickly moves to include other places, including the U.S. and even individual companies. Where did the term structural violence come from, what does it mean and how can it manifest? FitzRandolph breaks these questions down and examines the difference between obvious and immediate versus subversive and long-term violence. Listen in to learn more and gain insight into how ordinary folks can work against structural violence.

02-18
17:00

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