Nora Haenn, PhD
 
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I am a cultural anthropologist at North Carolina State University.

For the past thirty years, I have focused on the region of Calakmul in southern Mexico where I look at rain forest conservation, international migration, and economic policies that affect small-scale farmers. Now available from Oxford University Press, my book Marriage after Migration: An Ethnography of Money, Romance and Gender in Globalizing Mexico shares the stories of five women whose husbands and sons travel to the United States to work. The book shows how women in smallholding families, especially Indigenous women help build globalization without ever stepping foot outside Mexico.

At North Carolina State University, I teach in the Anthropology and International Studies programs and am affiliated faculty with the Genetic Engineering and Society Center. I recently completed a term as president of the Society for Economic Anthropology, a collection of thinkers and practitioners examining topics ranging from work and livelihoods to value creation to new modes of financialization and beyond.

Banner photo credit: Luis Melodelgado


Photo credit: L. Melodelgado

Photo credit: L. Melodelgado

CV

My research focuses on the livelihoods of smallholders and increasingly emphasizes the gendered quality of their global engagements.  

Photo: Dawn Rodriguez-Ward

Photo: Dawn Rodriguez-Ward

Research & Data

My research falls within a few areas: political ecology, agrarian studies, international development, labor migration, and globalization.

Teaching & Mentoring

I use ideas of cultural difference to expand students' imaginations and sharpen critical thinking.  My classes emphasize reading and writing.

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