Sabrina H. B. Hardenbergh (Southern Illinois University, Carbondale)
Submitted: Wed, 15 Apr 1998 22:27:54 -0500 (CDT)
Sabrina H. B. Hardenbergh, Ph.D.
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Department of Anthropology
Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
Carbondale, Illinois 62901-4502 USA
Mail address:
1 Hardenbergh Road
Carbondale, Illinois 62901 USA
phone: 618-549-2608
(manual fax available only if you phone and ask first)
e-mail: sabrina@midwest.net
Ph.D. September 1993, Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
M.A. May 1986, Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
non-degree student, Spring 1983, University of Missouri-Columbia
B.A. May 1982, Anthropology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
transfer student, Summer 1980, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale
Member. Research Committee. Illinois Rural Health Association. March 1997
- present.
Editorial Reviewer. Ecology of Food and Nutrition. 1989-present.
Research interests:
Medical anthropology; political ecology; political economic policy and
health; health/nutrition status, socioeconomic activity and famine early
warning systems; health/nutrition status, human growth and development,
stress physiology and individual behavior; HIV/AIDS; natural resource use,
health and conservation in Madagascar; Africa; health program feasibility
studies, planning, implementation and evaluation in Southern Illinois
Languages: English, French, beginning Malagasy, some Spanish
Foreign travel: East Africa, South Asia
Research positions:
Consultant. September 1997 to present.
Research Associate. June 1996 - September 1997.
Center for Rural Health and Social Service Development, Southern Illinois
University, 150 E. Pleasant Hill Rd., Carbondale, IL 62901-6892. Director:
Paul Sarvela. Proposal writing, planning, implementation, financing, data
analysis, and evaluation for health programs in southern Illinois.
Dissertation Field Work. June 1990 - March 1991.
Undernutrition, Illness and Children's Work in an Agricultural Rain Forest
Community of Madagascar. Ranomafana National Park, Madagascar.
Negotiation, technical coordination, personnel training, interviews,
analysis, reports.
Reconnaissance in Madagascar. November 1990, March 1991.
Interviewed local representatives and people about resource use, health and
conservation management at Betampona, Beza-Mahafaly, Perinet, Masoala and
Montagne d'Ambre reserves and national parks. Reports to NGO's.
Co-Project Investigator. June-August 1989/present.
Baseline health survey of pilot communities, Ranomafana National Park
conservation and development project, Madagascar. Fieldwork, personnel
training, data analysis, reports, negotiate data with NGO's. Consultant to
continuing work in 1990/91.
Teaching experience:
Adjunct Visiting Assistant Professor. January 1996 - May 1996.
Department of Sociology, University of North Carolina at Asheville,
Asheville, NC 28804.
Adjunct Assistant Professor. January 1995 - June 1995.
Department of Anthropology, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC 28608.
Adjunct Visiting Assistant Professor. January 1995 - May 1995.
Department of Anthropology & Sociology, Davidson College, Davidson, NC
28036-1719.
Temporary Assistant Professor. September 1993 - June 1994.
Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-1619.
Instructor, Continuing Education, University of Massachusetts at Amherst,
Amherst, MA 01003.
.......Anthropology 103 Human Origins and Variation. January 1988 and
January 1990 (winter sessions).
.......Anthropology 100 Human Nature. June/July 1987 (summer session).
Publications:
Hardenbergh SHB (n.d.) Historic and recent natural resource use,
deforestation and human health in Madagascar, and assumptions in
conservation-development. Submitted to Human Ecology.
Hardenbergh SHB (1997) Why are boys so small?: child growth, diet and gender
near Ranomafana, Madagascar. Social Science & Medicine 44(11):1725-1738.
Hardenbergh SHB (1997) Results from an AIDS Service Program Review for Rural
Southern Illinois and the Adjacent Region. Technical report for Quality of
Life Services, Carbondale, IL.
Hardenbergh SHB (1996) Mobile clinic mail survey results for health care
providers and residents in Jackson, Franklin and Williamson counties of
southern Illinois. In SIH Mobile Clinic Feasibility Study. Technical report
by the Center for Rural Health & Social Service Development and the Small
Business Development Center, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
Hardenbergh SHB (1996) Behavioral quality and caloric intake in Malagasy
children relative to international growth references. The American Journal
of Human Biology 8(2):207-223.
Hardenbergh SHB (n.d.) Incorporating people, health and natural resource use
issues into conservation management for Madagascar: Praxis in medical and
biocultural anthropology. Widely circulated manuscript originally prepared
for H. Baer and M. Singer (eds.): A Dialogue Between Critical Medical
Anthropology and Bioculturalism: Toward a Political Ecology of Health (now
in revision and submitted to Human Ecology).
Thomas RB, Hardenbergh SHB, and Brenton BP (1993) Perspectives on
socioeconomic causes of and responses to food deprivation. In DS Krass, RB
Thomas and JW Cole (eds.): Ela' Qua: Essays in Honor of Richard B.
Woodbury. Research Report 28, Anthropology, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, pp. 129-144.
Hardenbergh SHB (1993) Undernutrition, Illness and Children's Work in an
Agricultural Rain Forest Community of Madagascar. Dissertation, Department
of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Hardenbergh SHB (1992) Realizing conservation-development in Madagascar.
The Valley Optimist 1(8):8-9,38.
Kightlinger LK, Paine SHBH1, Boohdoo Kightlinger M (n.d.) Man and the
Malagasy Rain Forest: An Integrated Conservation Project, Human Health
Survey. Completed RNPP manuscript, October 1990.
Thomas RB, Paine SHBH1, and Brenton BP (1989) Perspectives on socioeconomic
causes of and responses to food deprivation. Food and Nutrition Bulletin
11:41-54.
Paine SHBH and Savulis ER (n.d.) Archaeological Locational Survey for the
Gosselin Parcel Near the Hassanomisco Burying Ground, Grafton,
Massachusetts. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Archaeological
Services. Completed technical manuscript.
Paine SHBH1 and Savulis ER (n.d.) Archaeological Locational Survey for the
Lamothe Parcel Near the Hassanomisco Burying Ground, Grafton, Massachusetts.
Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Archaeological Services.
Completed technical manuscript.
Landreth GK and Hardenbergh SHB (1986) Navajo sites on Area IV. In AL
Christenson and WJ Parry (eds.): Excavations on Black Mesa, 1983: A
Descriptive Report. Center for Archaeological Investigations Research Paper
46. Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
Estes BM, Hays KA, and Hardenbergh SHB (1984) Navajo sites investigated in
J-27 mining area. In DL Nichols and FE Smiley (eds.): Excavations on Black
Mesa, 1982: A Descriptive Report. Center for Archaeological
Investigations Research Paper 39. Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.