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Catherine Panter-Brick

Bruce A. and Davi-Ellen Chabner Professor of Anthropology, Health, and Global Affairs and Professor of Public Health
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Affiliated Faculty, Yale Institute for Global Health

About

Titles

Bruce A. and Davi-Ellen Chabner Professor of Anthropology, Health, and Global Affairs and Professor of Public Health

Affiliated Faculty, Yale Institute for Global Health

Biography

Professor Panter-Brick's research consists of critical analyses of health and wellbeing across key stages of human development, giving special attention to the impact of poverty, disease, malnutrition, armed conflict, and social marginalization.

She has directed large interdisciplinary projects in Afghanistan, Ethiopia, the Gambia, Nepal, Niger, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Tanzania, and the United Kingdom. These projects include work on global public health and health interventions, mental health, psychosocial stress, disease ecology, nutrition, and human reproduction. Her focus on children in global adversity has included biocultural research with street children, refugees, and war-affected adolescents. She teaches courses on wellbeing, livelihoods, and health, disease ecology, nutritional anthropology, and medical anthropology.

She has published widely on child and adolescent health, including articles on violence and mental health in Afghanistan, household decision-making and infant survival in famine-stricken Niger, the social ecology of growth retardation in Nepali slums, biomarkers of stress in contexts of violence and homelessness, the effectiveness of public health interventions, and human rights and public health approaches as applied to international work with street children.

She has edited several books to bridge research findings into teaching practice, including Health, Risk, and Adversity (2009), Hunter-Gatherers: An Interdisciplinary Perspective (2001), Abandoned Children (2000), Hormones, Health and Behavior (1999), and Biosocial Perspectives on Children (1989). She is currently Senior Editor (Medical Anthropology section) for Social Science & Medicine. Prior to coming to Yale, Panter-Brick was Professor of Anthropology at Durham University in the United Kingdom.

Appointments

  • Social and Behavioral Sciences

    Professor
    Secondary

Other Departments & Organizations

Research

Overview

Catherine Panter-Brick is Professor of Anthropology, Health, and Global Affairs at Yale University’s Jackson School of Global Affairs and Department of Anthropology. She leads initiatives to develop sustained partnerships across research, practice, and policy. Her program evaluations with Afghan and Syrian refugees are leading examples of systems-level work on mental health, resilience, and social cohesion in war-affected communities. She received the Lucy Mair Medal, awarded by the Royal Anthropology Institute, to honor excellence in the active recognition of human dignity. Panter-Brick has been a keynote speaker at the United Nations, the World Health Organization, and the World Bank. She has published ~170 peer-reviewed publications, coediting eight books (notably Pathways to Peace) and policy briefs on sustainable peacebuilding, fathers for peace and equity, religion and social justice, and resilience. Schooled in France and the UK, as well as in Nigeria and Zimbabwe, she took up a Junior Research Fellowship at Oxford and a Professorship in Anthropology at Durham University. At Yale, Panter-Brick directs the Global Health Studies Multidisciplinary Academic Program and the Program on Conflict, Resilience, and Health.

Medical Research Interests

Adolescent Health; Health Equity; Parenting; Public-Private Sector Partnerships; Resilience, Psychological; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic; Warfare and Armed Conflicts

Research at a Glance

Yale Co-Authors

Frequent collaborators of Catherine Panter-Brick's published research.

Publications

2024

2023

Academic Achievements & Community Involvement

  • honor

    Lucy Mair Medal, to honour excellence in the application of anthropology to the relief of poverty and distress, and to the active recognition of human dignity

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