This initiative is engaged in the development of a Radical Praxis in Contemporary Anthropology and is designed to explore and implement what a radically humanist anthropology could look like.  This initiative merged in response to Ryan Jobson’s 2019 year-in-review essay for American Anthropologist, “The Case for Letting Anthropology Burn”. 

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The Transnational Justice Project (TJP) is a research cluster engaged in the transnational study of justice. By conducting research projects aimed to understand the nature of injustice in society and its connection to law, culture, power, and the state, TJP aims to explore the complexities of cultural change in our world. 

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Visualizing Justice is a project that seeks to make visible and accessible the social, political, and historical contexts in which racial injustice occurs. Through an innovative transdisciplinary approach that brings insights from law, anthropology, history and art, together with practices of film-making and visualisation, the project explores ways of depicting layers of injustice that are often invisible to legal processes.

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