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Enrique
J. Mayer
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Enrique
J. Mayer
(Ph.D., Cornell 1974) is Professor of Anthropology.
Born in the highlands of Peru to Jewish immigrant
parents who had fled Nazi Germany, Enrique Mayer completed
his college education at the London School of Economics
and received his doctorate from Cornell University.
His professional career as a university teacher began
at the Pontificia Universidad Católica in Lima,
Peru. He later moved to Mexico City, where he took
charge of the Department of Anthropological Research
at the Inter American Indian Institute. In 1982 he
joined the faculty of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
with a joint appointment in the Department of Anthropology
and the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies.
In 1995, he became a member of the Anthropology Department
at Yale University.
Professor Mayer specializes in Andean agricultural
systems and Latin American peasantries. His work has
shown that regions characterized by diversity (such
as mountainous environments, small islands, and "marginal"
lands), not suitable for agribusiness, are exploited
by peasants in strikingly similar ways. Worldwide,
peasant forms of production predominate and persist
in these environments. These agricultural systems are
important to those concerned about world genetic resources,
or about environmental conservation, and to scholars
who seek an understanding of ancient and yet also
very contemporary Non Western rural life-ways. He
is currently collecting "ugly" stories about
the agrarian reform in Peru (1969), finding that most
people, although they benefited from it, nonetheless
feel victimized and regard the reform as a failure.
He is also the author of The Articulated Peasant: Household Economies in the Andes (2001).
Mailing address:
Department of Anthropology
Yale University
P. O. Box 208277
New Haven, CT 06520-8277
Office address:
Room 116, 10 Sachem Street
Tel: (203) 432-3674
Fax: (203) 432-3669
E mail: enrique.mayer@yale.edu
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