Aim & Scope
The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (JLACA) is a peer-reviewed journal of anthropological research on Latin America and the Caribbean, which is published in English, Spanish, and Portuguese. The journal maintains a broad definition of geographical remit and includes diasporic populations. This inclusion is aimed at allowing systematic, fertile, and intellectually stimulating comparisons, which have not been sufficiently explored in publications about the region. As a publication of the American Anthropological Association, JLACA 's mission is to provide a venue for anthropologists (sociocultural anthropologists, social archaeologists, sociolinguists, ethnohistorians etc.) - as well as for scholars of cognate disciplines - who are engaged in the critical study of social and cultural processes in Latin America and the Caribbean. [1]
Continuations / Journal History
( 1995 - 2006 ) | Journal of Latin American Anthropology | ( 2007 - 9999 ) | Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (JLACA) |
2024
Cannibalistic exchanges with mountain‐ancestors: Moral economies of gold mining in northern Peru
Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (JLACA) , 2024
N Liberona Concha , R Rodríguez , C Rivera , M Ramírez
Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (JLACA) , 2024
Decolonizing education through Ayuuk indigenous praxis: Three visions from Oaxaca, Mexico
No authors listed.
Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology (JLACA) , 2024