The SfAA Podcast Archive
The SfAA Podcast Project is a student-led initiative to provide audio records of sessions from the Annual Meetings to the public, free of charge. We strive to include a broad range of interests from diverse perspectives with the intent of extending conversations throughout the years. Our ultimate goal is to make these dialogues accessible to a global audience. This is the podcast feed dedicated to the archive of the SfAA Podcast, from years 2007 to 2024.
Episodes

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Immigration Politics After the Election
CHAIR: GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: CHAVEZ, Leo (UCI), HEYMAN, Josiah (UTEP), CASTANEDA, Heide (USF), HEIDBRINK, Lauren (CSULB), GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U) Immigration Politics After the Election. The topic of immigration was wielded as campaign fodder throughout the 2016 election cycle, with Donald Trump promising to “build a wall” and aggressively expand mass deportations, and Hillary Clinton vowing to support and extend protections for US immigrants. No mere political theater, contentious politics surrounding immigration in the United States have profound ramifications for millions of people both within US borders and beyond. In this session, panelists discuss their work with migrants and their family members, exploring how migrants perceive and navigate the promises and actualities of 2016 US election results.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Immigration Politics After the Election
CHAIR: GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: CHAVEZ, Leo (UCI), HEYMAN, Josiah (UTEP), CASTANEDA, Heide (USF), HEIDBRINK, Lauren (CSULB), GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U) Immigration Politics After the Election. The topic of immigration was wielded as campaign fodder throughout the 2016 election cycle, with Donald Trump promising to “build a wall” and aggressively expand mass deportations, and Hillary Clinton vowing to support and extend protections for US immigrants. No mere political theater, contentious politics surrounding immigration in the United States have profound ramifications for millions of people both within US borders and beyond. In this session, panelists discuss their work with migrants and their family members, exploring how migrants perceive and navigate the promises and actualities of 2016 US election results.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Immigration Politics After the Election
CHAIR: GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: CHAVEZ, Leo (UCI), HEYMAN, Josiah (UTEP), CASTANEDA, Heide (USF), HEIDBRINK, Lauren (CSULB), GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U) Immigration Politics After the Election. The topic of immigration was wielded as campaign fodder throughout the 2016 election cycle, with Donald Trump promising to “build a wall” and aggressively expand mass deportations, and Hillary Clinton vowing to support and extend protections for US immigrants. No mere political theater, contentious politics surrounding immigration in the United States have profound ramifications for millions of people both within US borders and beyond. In this session, panelists discuss their work with migrants and their family members, exploring how migrants perceive and navigate the promises and actualities of 2016 US election results.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Immigration Politics After the Election
CHAIR: GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: CHAVEZ, Leo (UCI), HEYMAN, Josiah (UTEP), CASTANEDA, Heide (USF), HEIDBRINK, Lauren (CSULB), GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U) Immigration Politics After the Election. The topic of immigration was wielded as campaign fodder throughout the 2016 election cycle, with Donald Trump promising to “build a wall” and aggressively expand mass deportations, and Hillary Clinton vowing to support and extend protections for US immigrants. No mere political theater, contentious politics surrounding immigration in the United States have profound ramifications for millions of people both within US borders and beyond. In this session, panelists discuss their work with migrants and their family members, exploring how migrants perceive and navigate the promises and actualities of 2016 US election results.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Immigration Politics After the Election
CHAIR: GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: CHAVEZ, Leo (UCI), HEYMAN, Josiah (UTEP), CASTANEDA, Heide (USF), HEIDBRINK, Lauren (CSULB), GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U)
GOMBERG-MUNOZ, Ruth (Loyola U) Immigration Politics After the Election. The topic of immigration was wielded as campaign fodder throughout the 2016 election cycle, with Donald Trump promising to “build a wall” and aggressively expand mass deportations, and Hillary Clinton vowing to support and extend protections for US immigrants. No mere political theater, contentious politics surrounding immigration in the United States have profound ramifications for millions of people both within US borders and beyond. In this session, panelists discuss their work with migrants and their family members, exploring how migrants perceive and navigate the promises and actualities of 2016 US election results.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight
CHAIR: HENRY, Doug (UNT)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: DAVIS, Brooke (Proctor & Gamble/TRUTH Rsch/UNT), TEAGUE, Margo (Impact Eval &Assessment Serv/ UNT), DOCARMO, Tania (UCI), MENIER, Kim (HelloText/UNT), SAUER, Ashley (SCE/UNT), HENRY, Doug (UNT)
HENRY, Doug (UNT) Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight. At the 10 year mark in the history of its online MA degree in Applied Anthropology, University of North Texas is reaching out to its alumni to comment on the nature of online training, and the values, benefits, perils, and pitfalls, it entails. In applied anthropology, online pedagogy can still be viewed somewhat skeptically; this skepticism prevents honest evaluation of tools and methodologies that can bring anthropology to those unable to attend traditional programs. By inviting alumni two, four, and six years out, this session hopes to open critical dialogue for a longitudinal perspective on the value of online education, and assess who can benefit most, and how.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight
CHAIR: HENRY, Doug (UNT)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: DAVIS, Brooke (Proctor & Gamble/TRUTH Rsch/UNT), TEAGUE, Margo (Impact Eval &Assessment Serv/ UNT), DOCARMO, Tania (UCI), MENIER, Kim (HelloText/UNT), SAUER, Ashley (SCE/UNT), HENRY, Doug (UNT)
HENRY, Doug (UNT) Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight. At the 10 year mark in the history of its online MA degree in Applied Anthropology, University of North Texas is reaching out to its alumni to comment on the nature of online training, and the values, benefits, perils, and pitfalls, it entails. In applied anthropology, online pedagogy can still be viewed somewhat skeptically; this skepticism prevents honest evaluation of tools and methodologies that can bring anthropology to those unable to attend traditional programs. By inviting alumni two, four, and six years out, this session hopes to open critical dialogue for a longitudinal perspective on the value of online education, and assess who can benefit most, and how.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight
CHAIR: HENRY, Doug (UNT)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: DAVIS, Brooke (Proctor & Gamble/TRUTH Rsch/UNT), TEAGUE, Margo (Impact Eval &Assessment Serv/ UNT), DOCARMO, Tania (UCI), MENIER, Kim (HelloText/UNT), SAUER, Ashley (SCE/UNT), HENRY, Doug (UNT)
HENRY, Doug (UNT) Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight. At the 10 year mark in the history of its online MA degree in Applied Anthropology, University of North Texas is reaching out to its alumni to comment on the nature of online training, and the values, benefits, perils, and pitfalls, it entails. In applied anthropology, online pedagogy can still be viewed somewhat skeptically; this skepticism prevents honest evaluation of tools and methodologies that can bring anthropology to those unable to attend traditional programs. By inviting alumni two, four, and six years out, this session hopes to open critical dialogue for a longitudinal perspective on the value of online education, and assess who can benefit most, and how.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight
CHAIR: HENRY, Doug (UNT)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: DAVIS, Brooke (Proctor & Gamble/TRUTH Rsch/UNT), TEAGUE, Margo (Impact Eval &Assessment Serv/ UNT), DOCARMO, Tania (UCI), MENIER, Kim (HelloText/UNT), SAUER, Ashley (SCE/UNT), HENRY, Doug (UNT)
HENRY, Doug (UNT) Celebrating Ten Years of Online Master’s Training: The View in Hindsight. At the 10 year mark in the history of its online MA degree in Applied Anthropology, University of North Texas is reaching out to its alumni to comment on the nature of online training, and the values, benefits, perils, and pitfalls, it entails. In applied anthropology, online pedagogy can still be viewed somewhat skeptically; this skepticism prevents honest evaluation of tools and methodologies that can bring anthropology to those unable to attend traditional programs. By inviting alumni two, four, and six years out, this session hopes to open critical dialogue for a longitudinal perspective on the value of online education, and assess who can benefit most, and how.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
Tuesday Mar 19, 2024
How to Find Jobs (Literally) with Applied Anthropology? or Passionate Students, Insecure Markets: How to Prepare in Grad School for the “Life After?”
CHAIR: MANDACHE, Luminiţa-Anda (COPAA)
ROUNDTABLE PARTICIPANTS: COPELAND, Toni J. (MS State U), HITCH, Emilie (UMN), NEWTON, Kevin (ServiceMaster)
MANDACHE, Luminiţa-Anda (COPAA) How to Find Jobs (Literally) with Applied Anthropology? or Passionate Students, Insecure Markets: How to Prepare in Grad School for the “Life After?” The aim of this panel is to collect suggestions for graduate students interested in getting a job with applied anthropology outside the academia. Graduate students, recent employees, and faculties from applied anthropology programs will tell their stories and share the best strategies for preparing for the job market. Additionally, the panel provides the space for conversation between participants from the two sides of the job market.
Session took place in Santa Fe, NM at the 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2017.

Welcome to the Archive
We are excited to bring you into the SfAA podcast archives! This has been the next big evolution of the SfAA Podcast project where we work to bring the SfAA experience to the global population of anthropologists and anthro-curious.
The SfAA Podcast Project originated from a conversation at the 2005 Annual Meeting in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where a student was debating which panel to attend. Her then-boyfriend suggested listening to a recording of one of the panels afterwards, but SfAA did not offer recordings at that time.
The following year, the student discussed the idea with her advisor, who supported it and helped pitch it to the SfAA Executive Director. With their support, the student managed to podcast her first seven sessions in 2007 with the help of two friends.
Since then, the Podcast Project has expanded its core team and offered annual meeting attendance to volunteers. The project has also built a global following, with its podcasts being used worldwide.
We hope you enjoy!



