11 research outputs found
Cryptic chytridiomycosis linked to climate and genetic variation in amphibian populations of the southeastern United States
High temporal and individual variation in the prevalence and intensity of chytrid infection in the southernmost Leaf Frog of the genus Pithecopus (Anura, Phyllomedusidae)
Population dynamics of the critically endangered toad Atelopus cruciger and the fungal disease chytridiomycosis
Determinants of MNC’s Knowledge Inflows to Subsidiaries: A Perspective on Internalization Advantages
Muslims’ View of God as a Predictor of Ethical Behaviour in Organisations: Scale Development and Validation
War: Back to the Future
Annual Review of Anthropology, 1999.War is a fraught subject. Those who study it often fight about it. This chapter examines the current state of the study of war, described and analyzed by anthropologists and nonanthropologists who employ concepts like culture in writing about the future of war. Warfare seems bound to keep us revisiting certain aspects of the past. At the same time, nothing induces change quite like conflict. Does war have a future? The preponderance of evidence-biological, archeological, ethnological- suggests that it does. But not all anthropologists agree. This in and of itself represents one of a series of gaps that begs further consideration