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Lawrence Rosen

Lawrence Rosen

Professor

Ph.D. University of Chicago 1968
J.D. University of Chicago 1974

131 Aaron Burr Hall
(609) 258-2671
lrosen@princeton.edu
Office hours: M 2-4pm; Th 9am-12pm; and by appt.; WASS

interests
culture theory, anthropology of law, ethnic relations, law and the American family, American Indian legal problems; North Africa, Middle East

short bio
Lawrence Rosen is both an anthropologist and a lawyer. His main interests are in the relation between cultural concepts and their implementation in social and legal relationships. His main fieldwork has been in North Africa; he has also worked as an attorney on a number of American Indian legal cases. His publications include Law as Culture: An Invitation, The American Indian and the Law (editor), Meaning and Order in Moroccan Society (co-author), Bargaining for Reality: The Construction of Social Relations in a Muslim Community, The Anthropology of Justice: Law as Culture in Muslim Society, and Other Intentions: Cultural Contexts and the Attribution of Inner States (editor). He teaches courses on law and anthropology, comparative religious systems, the American Indian and the law, and the theory of cultural systems. He received the Presidential Distinguished Teaching Award in 1997 and was a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar for 1997-98.

Teaching

Fall 2011

ANT 201
Introduction to Anthropology

Spring 2012 (preliminary)

ANT 211
Cultural Property and the Arts of Native North America

ANT course TBD


2010-2011

ANT 212
Cultural Freedoms: Hate Speech, Blasphemy, and Pornography

ANT 342
The Anthropology of Law

ANT 423
Anthropological Approaches to Arab Society and Culture 


2009-2010
Academic year leave


ANT 2008-2009

ANT 201
Introduction to Anthropology

ANT 211
Cultural Property and the Arts of Native North America

ANT 342
The Anthropology of Law