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Tag: Caroline Seagle

Whose Development? A Critical Lens on Development in Africa and Madagascar.

Photo by Sandra Evers

By Aliene van Dijk I still remember vividly the expectations that I had of visiting one of the libraries supposedly holding anthropological studies in Madagascar’s capital Antananarivo. I naively thought that even in a country as poor as Madagascar, at least the library would be decent. But it proved quite a deception. In a small one-room building, with walls covered in old books, I found out that reality was different. Sitting on the floor and looking through a very old-fashioned cabinet of cards to look up relevant material, my research partner and I found none. It would probably be interesting for a historian, since the books were so old, but for present-day anthropological fieldwork it was not very useful. ‘How can they study in these circumstances?’, I thought.

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Anthropology graduate wins Thesis Prize

Friday the 8th of January Caroline Seagle, a graduate of the MSc programme in Social and Cultural Anthropology at the VU University Amsterdam, won a prize for her thesis Biodiversity for whom? on the local perceptions and experiences of the Rio Tinto/QMM ilmenite mining project  in Ampasy Nahampohana, Southeast Madagascar. The Johannes van der Zouwen thesis prize is awarded every year to the best MSc thesis.

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