Contents Malinowski Engaged Universities, Community Based Research Organizations and Third Sector Science in a Global System; P.K. New From Cancer to Sexually Transmitted Explorations of Social Stigma Among Cervical Cancer Survivors; Risky Neoliberalism and Workplace Safety in Wyoming Coal Mines; Working Homeless Men in Calgary, Hegemony and Identity; Metaphors of High Risk Pregnancy in a Context of Health Policy for the "Undeserving" Poor; Mobilizing Communities through International Study Project Mexico Immersion and New Immigrants in the Midwest; Foraging for A Comparison of Food Insecurity, Production and Risk Among Farmers, Forest Foragers and Marine Foragers in Southwestern Madagascar; National Policy for and Integrated Health System and Local The Case Study of Papua New Guinea and the Nasioi; Where Bad Teeth Come Culture and Causal Force; In and Out of the Policy and the Case for a Strategic Anthropology
Jean J. Schensul is a medical anthropologist and senior scientist at The Institute for Community Research, in Hartford, Connecticut. Dr. Schensul is most notable for her research on HIV/AIDS prevention and other health-related research in the United States, as well as her extensive writing on ethnographic research methods. She has made notable contributions to the field of applied anthropology, with her work on structural interventions to health disparities leading to the development of new organizations, community research partnerships, and community/university associations. Schensul’s work has been dedicated to community-based research on topics such as senior health, education, and substance abuse, among others.