The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology

The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology is an international, peer-reviewed journal committed to publishing leading scholarship in contemporary anthropology. Geographically diverse articles provide a range of theoretical or ethical perspectives, from the traditional to the mischievous or subversive, and aim to offer new insights into the worlds in which we live. The journal will publish challenging ethnography and push hard at the boundaries of the discipline in addition to examining or incorporating fields—from economics to neuroscience—with which anthropology has long been in dialogue. The original journal of this name was an in-house publication based at Cambridge University, with a remit to provide a space in which innovative material and ideas could be tested. The new Cambridge Journal of Anthropology builds on that tradition and seeks to produce new analytical toolkits for anthropology or to take all such intellectual exploration to task. - See more at: www.berghahnjournals.com/cja

All Issues
2020s
  1. 2020 (Vol. 38)
    1. No. 2 Capture, Autonomy, Dependence: Theorising Global Energy Futures from Africa Autumn 2020 pp. v, 1-147
    2. No. 1 Confinement Beyond Site: Connecting Urban and Prison Ethnographies Spring 2020 pp. v, 1-149
2010s
2000s
1990s
1980s
1970s