User:Robertadlam/sandbox

Category:Anthropologist Category:Anthropology Category:Social and Cultural Anthropology Dr. Robert G. Adlam PhD is a Canadian Anthropologist and Associate Professor at Mount Allison University, Department Head 2004-2007 and 2013-2016. Additionally he was an Adjunct Professor at the University of New Brunswick in Interdisciplinary Studies from 2007-2011. He completed his B.Sc. in Anthropology with Honours at Trent University; M.A. in Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Toronto; and Ph.D. in Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Toronto. Dissertation (1986): The Structural Basis of Tahltan Indian Society. He has been a Member of the Canadian Anthropology Society/Societe canadienne d’anthropologie since 1989; Executive Member and Treasurer, 2008-2011.

Publications include: 1993 "Community-Based Research and the Anthropologist" Proactive 12 (2): 3-16* “Introduction” Proactive 12 (2): 1-2*; 1995 "The Dog-Husband and 'Dirty' Women: The cultural context of a traditional Tahltan narrative" Igitur VI-VII (2/1): 39-57*; 1998-99 “Les marmottes, les femmes et les esprits gardiens: transformation spirituelle et chamanisme” recherches amerindiennes au quebec XXVIII (3): 41-48*; 2002 “Fish Talk” Anthropologica XLIV: 99-111*; 2003 “Indigenous Rights, the Marshall Decision and Cultural Restoration” Acadiensis XXXIII (1): 108-113* 2005 “Shamanism in the postmodern world: A review essay” with Lorne Holyoak, University of Saskatchewan. Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 34/3-4: 517-568*; 2007 “The Northern Athabaskan Survey of Edward Sapir and James A. Teit” Anthropological Linguistics 49/2: 99-117*; 2012 with Ed Koenig Assessing Socio-Economic Parameters and Methodology for Food, Social and Ceremonial (FSC) Fisheries in a Species at Risk Act (SARA) Perspective; 2017 Kira Gee, Andreas Kannen, Robert Adlam, Cecilia Brooks, Mollie Chapman, Roland Cormier, Christian Fischer, Steve Fletcher, Matthew Gubbins, Rachel Shucksmith, Rebecca Shellock “Identifying culturally significant areas for marine spatial planning” Ocean & Coastal Management 136:139-147*

Workshop: Fish Talk: Research Technique and Experiential Learning Tools, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada, Summary of Presentation, June 5, 2000

Professional website: www.robertadlam.ca