
Noa Lavi
email: [email protected]
I study the Nayaka hunting and gathering people in India, focusing on people's experience and social relationships in light of development intervention, assimilation pressure and school education.
My research interests include:
- Hunter-gatherers everyday experience and social relationships under a changing social and physical environment
- Hunter-gatherers children and childhood
- Hunter-gatherers social learning
- Human-animal relations
- Nayaka forest stories and tales
- Politics of indigeneity
- Lived experience of development projects
- Politics of aid, adivasis and scheduled tribes in India
In addition to my own research, I am also involved in other research projects:
- The Forager Children Interdisciplinary Studies Group, founded in 2016 by Sheina Lew-Levy, Noa Lavi, Rachel Reckin, and Kate Ellis-Davies at the University of Cambridge. This research group is interested in the pasts, presents, and futures of hunter-gatherer children and childhood, with a particular focus on learning.
- Hunter-gatherers Ethnoarchaeology. A multi-disciplinary research of archaeological site formation processes associated with foragers in tropical forests. This project involve ethnographic research (Noa Lavi) and geo-ethnoarchaeology (David Friesem, University of Cambridge).
I study the Nayaka hunting and gathering people in India, focusing on people's experience and social relationships in light of development intervention, assimilation pressure and school education.
My research interests include:
- Hunter-gatherers everyday experience and social relationships under a changing social and physical environment
- Hunter-gatherers children and childhood
- Hunter-gatherers social learning
- Human-animal relations
- Nayaka forest stories and tales
- Politics of indigeneity
- Lived experience of development projects
- Politics of aid, adivasis and scheduled tribes in India
In addition to my own research, I am also involved in other research projects:
- The Forager Children Interdisciplinary Studies Group, founded in 2016 by Sheina Lew-Levy, Noa Lavi, Rachel Reckin, and Kate Ellis-Davies at the University of Cambridge. This research group is interested in the pasts, presents, and futures of hunter-gatherer children and childhood, with a particular focus on learning.
- Hunter-gatherers Ethnoarchaeology. A multi-disciplinary research of archaeological site formation processes associated with foragers in tropical forests. This project involve ethnographic research (Noa Lavi) and geo-ethnoarchaeology (David Friesem, University of Cambridge).
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