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.

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Episodes

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health (SMA) 
CHAIRS: SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) 
DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Consonance, Personal Agency, and Depressive Symptoms in Urban Brazil 
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U) Ritual and Resilience among Indigenous Indian Conservation Refugees DENGAH, Francois (USU) Measuring the ReligionHealth Association: Using Cultural Consonance to Understand Mental Health Patterns among Pentecostals and Mormons 
ANDREWS, Courtney (U Alabama) Finding the Culture in Acculturation: Does Cultural Consonance Mediate the Health Effects of Acculturative Stress? 
GRAVLEE, Clarence C., VACCA, Raffaele, D’INGEO, Dalila, and MCCARTY, Christopher (UF) Vicarious Racism, Social Networks, and Racial Inequalities in Health 
BAGWELL, Andrew, SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G., DENGAH, Francois, and VAN OOSTENBURG, Max (CO State U) A Cultural Consonance Approach to Online Gaming Experience: Beyond Addiction and Disorder
 
ABSTRACT:
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health. There is a growing body of literature demonstrating that individuals’ understanding of and consonance with cultural models are associated with health status, SESSION ABSTRACTS107 assessed in a variety of ways.  The papers in this session further explore these associations in a number of settings, including rural India, urban Brazil, and the United States.  A critical focus is on how knowledge of and consonance with cultural models contribute to individual resilience in the face of adversity.  The papers demonstrate the utility of a distributional model of culture in resolving fundamental questions in medical anthropology.
Session took place in Vancouver, B.C. Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, March 29 - April 2, 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health (SMA) 
CHAIRS: SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) 
DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Consonance, Personal Agency, and Depressive Symptoms in Urban Brazil 
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U) Ritual and Resilience among Indigenous Indian Conservation Refugees DENGAH, Francois (USU) Measuring the ReligionHealth Association: Using Cultural Consonance to Understand Mental Health Patterns among Pentecostals and Mormons 
ANDREWS, Courtney (U Alabama) Finding the Culture in Acculturation: Does Cultural Consonance Mediate the Health Effects of Acculturative Stress? 
GRAVLEE, Clarence C., VACCA, Raffaele, D’INGEO, Dalila, and MCCARTY, Christopher (UF) Vicarious Racism, Social Networks, and Racial Inequalities in Health 
BAGWELL, Andrew, SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G., DENGAH, Francois, and VAN OOSTENBURG, Max (CO State U) A Cultural Consonance Approach to Online Gaming Experience: Beyond Addiction and Disorder
 
ABSTRACT:
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health. There is a growing body of literature demonstrating that individuals’ understanding of and consonance with cultural models are associated with health status, SESSION ABSTRACTS107 assessed in a variety of ways.  The papers in this session further explore these associations in a number of settings, including rural India, urban Brazil, and the United States.  A critical focus is on how knowledge of and consonance with cultural models contribute to individual resilience in the face of adversity.  The papers demonstrate the utility of a distributional model of culture in resolving fundamental questions in medical anthropology.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, B.C. Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, March 29 - April 2, 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health (SMA) 
CHAIRS: SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) 
DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Consonance, Personal Agency, and Depressive Symptoms in Urban Brazil 
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U) Ritual and Resilience among Indigenous Indian Conservation Refugees DENGAH, Francois (USU) Measuring the ReligionHealth Association: Using Cultural Consonance to Understand Mental Health Patterns among Pentecostals and Mormons 
ANDREWS, Courtney (U Alabama) Finding the Culture in Acculturation: Does Cultural Consonance Mediate the Health Effects of Acculturative Stress? 
GRAVLEE, Clarence C., VACCA, Raffaele, D’INGEO, Dalila, and MCCARTY, Christopher (UF) Vicarious Racism, Social Networks, and Racial Inequalities in Health 
BAGWELL, Andrew, SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G., DENGAH, Francois, and VAN OOSTENBURG, Max (CO State U) A Cultural Consonance Approach to Online Gaming Experience: Beyond Addiction and Disorder
 
ABSTRACT:
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health. There is a growing body of literature demonstrating that individuals’ understanding of and consonance with cultural models are associated with health status, SESSION ABSTRACTS107 assessed in a variety of ways.  The papers in this session further explore these associations in a number of settings, including rural India, urban Brazil, and the United States.  A critical focus is on how knowledge of and consonance with cultural models contribute to individual resilience in the face of adversity.  The papers demonstrate the utility of a distributional model of culture in resolving fundamental questions in medical anthropology.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, B.C. Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, March 29 - April 2, 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health (SMA) 
CHAIRS: SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) 
DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Consonance, Personal Agency, and Depressive Symptoms in Urban Brazil 
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U) Ritual and Resilience among Indigenous Indian Conservation Refugees DENGAH, Francois (USU) Measuring the ReligionHealth Association: Using Cultural Consonance to Understand Mental Health Patterns among Pentecostals and Mormons 
ANDREWS, Courtney (U Alabama) Finding the Culture in Acculturation: Does Cultural Consonance Mediate the Health Effects of Acculturative Stress? 
GRAVLEE, Clarence C., VACCA, Raffaele, D’INGEO, Dalila, and MCCARTY, Christopher (UF) Vicarious Racism, Social Networks, and Racial Inequalities in Health 
BAGWELL, Andrew, SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G., DENGAH, Francois, and VAN OOSTENBURG, Max (CO State U) A Cultural Consonance Approach to Online Gaming Experience: Beyond Addiction and Disorder
 
ABSTRACT:
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health. There is a growing body of literature demonstrating that individuals’ understanding of and consonance with cultural models are associated with health status, SESSION ABSTRACTS107 assessed in a variety of ways.  The papers in this session further explore these associations in a number of settings, including rural India, urban Brazil, and the United States.  A critical focus is on how knowledge of and consonance with cultural models contribute to individual resilience in the face of adversity.  The papers demonstrate the utility of a distributional model of culture in resolving fundamental questions in medical anthropology.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, B.C. Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, March 29 - April 2, 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health (SMA) 
CHAIRS: SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) 
DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Consonance, Personal Agency, and Depressive Symptoms in Urban Brazil 
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U) Ritual and Resilience among Indigenous Indian Conservation Refugees DENGAH, Francois (USU) Measuring the ReligionHealth Association: Using Cultural Consonance to Understand Mental Health Patterns among Pentecostals and Mormons 
ANDREWS, Courtney (U Alabama) Finding the Culture in Acculturation: Does Cultural Consonance Mediate the Health Effects of Acculturative Stress? 
GRAVLEE, Clarence C., VACCA, Raffaele, D’INGEO, Dalila, and MCCARTY, Christopher (UF) Vicarious Racism, Social Networks, and Racial Inequalities in Health 
BAGWELL, Andrew, SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G., DENGAH, Francois, and VAN OOSTENBURG, Max (CO State U) A Cultural Consonance Approach to Online Gaming Experience: Beyond Addiction and Disorder
 
ABSTRACT:
SNODGRASS, Jeffrey G. (CO State U), DENGAH, Francois (USU), GRAVLEE, Clarence C. (UF), ANDREWS, Courtney and DRESSLER, William W. (U Alabama) Cultural Models, Resilience, and Health. There is a growing body of literature demonstrating that individuals’ understanding of and consonance with cultural models are associated with health status, SESSION ABSTRACTS107 assessed in a variety of ways.  The papers in this session further explore these associations in a number of settings, including rural India, urban Brazil, and the United States.  A critical focus is on how knowledge of and consonance with cultural models contribute to individual resilience in the face of adversity.  The papers demonstrate the utility of a distributional model of culture in resolving fundamental questions in medical anthropology.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, B.C. Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, March 29 - April 2, 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

J. Anthony Paredes Memorial Plenary
 
CHAIRS: HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch)
 
INTRODUCTION: SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) The Legacy of J. Anthony Paredes
 
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: JOHN, Grand Chief Edward (First Nations Summit Political Executive and North American Representative to the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues) Protecting Natural Resources through Principles of Reconciliation and Implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
 
Grand Chief Edward John, LL.B is the Hereditary Chief of Tl’azt’en Nation on Stuart Lake in Northern British Columbia, member of the First Nations Summit Task Group, former Co-Chair of the North American Indigenous Peoples’ Caucus, participated in the development of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in September 2007.
 
POINT, Gwen (Stó:lõ Nation Member, U Fraser Valley) Our Actions Today Impact the Next Seven Generations: Stó:Lô Approaches to Land and Water Protection
 
HILLAIRE, Darrell (Lummi Nation Member, Lummi Indian Business Council and founder of the Lummi Youth Academy) The Use of Film to Convey Native American Voices and Actions to Preserve the Earth
 
MENZIES, Charles R. (Gitxaała Nation, UBC) On the Front Lines!: Gitxaała, Oil, and Our Authority
 
HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) Protection of Natural Resources Cultural Heritage Strategies of First Nations and Native Americans. This session is presented in honor of the work of J. Anthony Paredes and his contributions to Native Americans in the Southeastern United States. As a result of the generous contribution of an endowment by the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama, a community in which Tony worked for many years, this session will become an annual event at the Society for Applied Anthropology Meetings. The Paredes Memorial Committee has determined that Tony’s memory and the endowment would be best served by presentations by Native Americans and First nations’ representatives drawn from the region where the meetings will be held. In the first annual session, the focus will be on cultural strategies for environmental protection.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, BC, Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

J. Anthony Paredes Memorial Plenary
 
CHAIRS: HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch)
 
INTRODUCTION: SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) The Legacy of J. Anthony Paredes
 
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: JOHN, Grand Chief Edward (First Nations Summit Political Executive and North American Representative to the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues) Protecting Natural Resources through Principles of Reconciliation and Implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
 
Grand Chief Edward John, LL.B is the Hereditary Chief of Tl’azt’en Nation on Stuart Lake in Northern British Columbia, member of the First Nations Summit Task Group, former Co-Chair of the North American Indigenous Peoples’ Caucus, participated in the development of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in September 2007.
 
POINT, Gwen (Stó:lõ Nation Member, U Fraser Valley) Our Actions Today Impact the Next Seven Generations: Stó:Lô Approaches to Land and Water Protection
 
HILLAIRE, Darrell (Lummi Nation Member, Lummi Indian Business Council and founder of the Lummi Youth Academy) The Use of Film to Convey Native American Voices and Actions to Preserve the Earth
 
MENZIES, Charles R. (Gitxaała Nation, UBC) On the Front Lines!: Gitxaała, Oil, and Our Authority
 
HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) Protection of Natural Resources Cultural Heritage Strategies of First Nations and Native Americans. This session is presented in honor of the work of J. Anthony Paredes and his contributions to Native Americans in the Southeastern United States. As a result of the generous contribution of an endowment by the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama, a community in which Tony worked for many years, this session will become an annual event at the Society for Applied Anthropology Meetings. The Paredes Memorial Committee has determined that Tony’s memory and the endowment would be best served by presentations by Native Americans and First nations’ representatives drawn from the region where the meetings will be held. In the first annual session, the focus will be on cultural strategies for environmental protection.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, BC, Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

J. Anthony Paredes Memorial Plenary
 
CHAIRS: HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch)
 
INTRODUCTION: SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) The Legacy of J. Anthony Paredes
 
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: JOHN, Grand Chief Edward (First Nations Summit Political Executive and North American Representative to the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues) Protecting Natural Resources through Principles of Reconciliation and Implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
 
Grand Chief Edward John, LL.B is the Hereditary Chief of Tl’azt’en Nation on Stuart Lake in Northern British Columbia, member of the First Nations Summit Task Group, former Co-Chair of the North American Indigenous Peoples’ Caucus, participated in the development of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in September 2007.
 
POINT, Gwen (Stó:lõ Nation Member, U Fraser Valley) Our Actions Today Impact the Next Seven Generations: Stó:Lô Approaches to Land and Water Protection
 
HILLAIRE, Darrell (Lummi Nation Member, Lummi Indian Business Council and founder of the Lummi Youth Academy) The Use of Film to Convey Native American Voices and Actions to Preserve the Earth
 
MENZIES, Charles R. (Gitxaała Nation, UBC) On the Front Lines!: Gitxaała, Oil, and Our Authority
 
HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) Protection of Natural Resources Cultural Heritage Strategies of First Nations and Native Americans. This session is presented in honor of the work of J. Anthony Paredes and his contributions to Native Americans in the Southeastern United States. As a result of the generous contribution of an endowment by the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama, a community in which Tony worked for many years, this session will become an annual event at the Society for Applied Anthropology Meetings. The Paredes Memorial Committee has determined that Tony’s memory and the endowment would be best served by presentations by Native Americans and First nations’ representatives drawn from the region where the meetings will be held. In the first annual session, the focus will be on cultural strategies for environmental protection.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, BC, Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

J. Anthony Paredes Memorial Plenary
 
CHAIRS: HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch)
 
INTRODUCTION: SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) The Legacy of J. Anthony Paredes
 
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: JOHN, Grand Chief Edward (First Nations Summit Political Executive and North American Representative to the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues) Protecting Natural Resources through Principles of Reconciliation and Implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
 
Grand Chief Edward John, LL.B is the Hereditary Chief of Tl’azt’en Nation on Stuart Lake in Northern British Columbia, member of the First Nations Summit Task Group, former Co-Chair of the North American Indigenous Peoples’ Caucus, participated in the development of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in September 2007.
 
POINT, Gwen (Stó:lõ Nation Member, U Fraser Valley) Our Actions Today Impact the Next Seven Generations: Stó:Lô Approaches to Land and Water Protection
 
HILLAIRE, Darrell (Lummi Nation Member, Lummi Indian Business Council and founder of the Lummi Youth Academy) The Use of Film to Convey Native American Voices and Actions to Preserve the Earth
 
MENZIES, Charles R. (Gitxaała Nation, UBC) On the Front Lines!: Gitxaała, Oil, and Our Authority
 
HENDERSON, J. Neil (Choctaw Tribe Member, U Oklahoma SPH) and SCHENSUL, Stephen L. (UConn Med Sch) Protection of Natural Resources Cultural Heritage Strategies of First Nations and Native Americans. This session is presented in honor of the work of J. Anthony Paredes and his contributions to Native Americans in the Southeastern United States. As a result of the generous contribution of an endowment by the Poarch Band of Creek Indians in Alabama, a community in which Tony worked for many years, this session will become an annual event at the Society for Applied Anthropology Meetings. The Paredes Memorial Committee has determined that Tony’s memory and the endowment would be best served by presentations by Native Americans and First nations’ representatives drawn from the region where the meetings will be held. In the first annual session, the focus will be on cultural strategies for environmental protection.
 
Session took place in Vancouver, BC, Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology in March 2016.

Tuesday Mar 19, 2024

User-Centered Approaches to Designing Programs, Products, and Processes 
CHAIR: SHADE, Molly (Hach) 
SHADE, Molly (Hach) Agile Anthropology: Adapting our Discipline to Software Development 
BEYER, Molly (UNT) Bringing Anthropological Insights to Human-Centered Design (HCD): Using Hydraulic Fracturing in Denton, Texas as a Case Study for Designing Community Resilience 
PAHL, Shane (ABCO) It’s Never Been a Problem Before: How to Introduce and Manage Environmental, Health & Safety Programs 
SARMIENTO, John (UNT) Observing Curriculum Usability with an Anthropologist Lens: An mHealth Case Study  ROTH, Heather S. (UNT) Advocating for the End User: Anthropology in Data Warehousing
 
ABSTRACT:
SHADE, Molly (Hach) User-Centered Approaches to Designing Programs, Products, and Processes. This panel explores how user-centered research, reinforced with anthropological theories and methods, effectively produces solutions in programs, products, and processes. We present a collection of five unique case studies including data warehouse construction, mobile community health, environmental and occupational management, Agile software development, and community resilience design. Using these applied projects as a starting point, we intend to stimulate discussion about the many intersections of anthropology and design. 
Session took place in Vancouver, B.C. Canada at the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, March 29 - April 2, 2016.

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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!

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