Elliott School of International School
Barbara D. Miller  

Barbara D. Miller

Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs

Director, Culture in Global Affairs Research and Policy Program

 
Building X 101
2112 G Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20052
Telephone: (202) 994-7257
Fax: (202) 994-4253
E-mail: barbar@gwu.edu

Education:
Ph.D., Syracuse University

Expertise:
Cultural anthropology, international health and development, gender issues, South Asia

Background:
Professor Miller received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in anthropology from Syracuse University. She joined the Elliott School in 1993 as a specialist in the anthropology of international development. Before that, she taught at the University of Rochester, SUNY Cortland, Ithaca College, Cornell University, and the University of Pittsburgh.

Dr. Miller has done most of her research on gender and health issues in India, but she has also studied rural development in Bangladesh, low-income household budgeting in Jamaica, and Hindu adolescents in Pittsburgh. Her current research takes three directions: child survival and gender inequality in India, health and illness patterns cross-culturally as affected by rapid development and population movements, and the role of culture in international policy and programs. Dr. Miller is the director of the Elliott School's research and policy program on Culture in Global Affairs and the convenor of the GW University Seminar Series of the same name.

Professor Miller teaches undergraduate courses in cultural anthropology and medical anthropology and graduate seminars in development anthropology, medical anthropology and culture and policy.

Her books include The Endangered Sex: Neglect of Female Children in Rural North India (2nd edition, Oxford University Press, 1997); an edited volume, Sex and Gender Hierarchies (Cambridge University Press, 1993); a co-edited volume with Alf Hiltebeitel, Hair: Its Power and Meaning in Asian Cultures (SUNY Press, 1998); and three undergraduate textbooks: Cultural Anthropology (Allyn and Bacon, 4th ed., 2008), Cultural Anthropology in a Globalizing World (Allyn & Bacon, 2009), and Anthropology (Allyn & Bacon, 2009). She is the editor of a new series, called Anthropology Works (Pearson/Allyn & Bacon).

Professor Miller served as the Associate Dean of the Elliott School from July 1999 to August 2002.

Courses Taught:
Anth 2 Intro. to Sociocultural Anthropology
Anth 154 Illness, Healing, and Culture
Anth 220 Anthropology of Development
Anth 221 Key Variables in the Development Process
Anth 222 Issues in Development: Population, Health and Development
Anth 222 Population, Health and Development in India
Anth 222 Migration and Mental Health
Anth 222 Culture, Risk and Security
Anth 224 Internship in Development Anthropology
Anth 254 Medical Anthropology

Last update: 10/4/2007

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