Erdmute Alber Explained

Erdmute Alber
Birth Date:14 July 1963
Birth Place:Hamburg, Germany
Nationality:German
Occupation:ethnologist
Doctoral Advisor:Georg Elwert

Erdmute Alber (born July 14, 1963, in Hamburg) is a German ethnologist with research focus in political and kinship anthropology. Since 2010 she has held the chair in Social Anthropology at the University of Bayreuth.

Education

From 1983 to 1990, Erdmute Alber studied literature, Spanish and history at the Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen and the Freie Universität Berlin. After completing her master's degree, she worked from 1993 to 2000 as a research assistant at the Institute for Ethnology at the Freie Universität Berlin supervised by Georg Elwert. During this time she received her doctorate in 1997 on Transformations of power and rule among the Baatombu in northern Benin (1900-1995). Her dissertation was awarded the research promotion prize of the Frobenius Society. In the years 2001/02 she was employed as a research assistant in the DFG funded project Social Parenthood in West Africa.[1] [2]

Career

From 2002 to 2007, Alber was appointed junior professor for Social Anthropology at the University of Bayreuth. In 2007, Alber was awarded a Heisenberg Professorship by the DFG for her outstanding scientific achievements, which she took up at the University of Bayreuth in 2008/09. She has held the Chair of Social Anthropology there since 2010. In 2011/12 she also received a fellowship at the research college Work and Age at the Humboldt University of Berlin.[3] [4] From 2018 to 2021, Alber was Vice Dean for Research in the 'Africa Multiple' cluster at the University of Bayreuth. From 2019 to 2021 she was director of the Bayreuth Academy of Advanced African Studies, of which she is one of the founding members (2012-2019). She has been a member of the funding committee for the KfW Young Talent Award since November 2022.

From 2004 to 2010, Alber held the position of deputy chairperson for two years, then chairperson of the Social Anthropology and Development Sociology Section of the German Sociological Association (DGS). Since 2004 she has headed the pre-selection committee and since 2010 has been a liaison lecturer for the at the University of Bayreuth. Also since 2004, she has been a liaison lecturer for the Heinrich Böll Foundation at the University of Bayreuth. She is a founding member and Principal Investigator of the Bayreuth International Graduate School of African Studies, where she was Equal Opportunities Officer 2007-2009 and Vice Dean 2009–2011. Since 2012 she has been a founding member and sub-project leader of the ‘Academy of Advanced African Studies’ and since 2012 a board member of the (VAD), where she was deputy chair from 2012 to 2014. She has been a member of the Senate of the University of Bayreuth since 2013 and a member of the scientific advisory board of the Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient (Berlin) since 2014. From 2014 to 2017 she was a member of the Commission for Self-Regulation in Science at the University of Bayreuth. From 1999 to 2015 she was editor of the Sociologus – Journal for Empirical Social Anthropology.[5] Erdmute Alber was a Fellow at the 'Merian Institute for Advanced Studies in Africa' (MIASA) in Accra at the University of Ghana (Legon University) in 2023.

Research

Alber carried out her first field research in Peru in 1988 and 1989. Since 1991, this has been followed by regular research stays in Benin and Togo (since 2006). Since 2013 she has also been involved in the sub-project African Middle Classes on the Move at the Bayreuth Academy of Advanced African Studies with field research in Kenya. She received teaching assignments at the History Department of the University of Zurich (Switzerland) and was a visiting professor at the Radboud University Nijmegen (Netherlands) in 2009.

Alber's regional interest was initially in the Andes region. Since 1991 she has been dealing with West Africa, in particular with the Republic of Benin. She has been researching and living intermittently in West Africa for over 25 years.[6] Her research interests are processes of social change and the resulting dynamics in politics and kinship. The focus is on two research fields: the anthropology of politics, law and power and the anthropology of kinship, family and childhood. Of particular interest to her are topics at the interface of both fields, such as family and childhood policies, social parenting or child trafficking.[7] Current concrete research topics are intergenerational relations, social parenthood and adoption, recent kinship constructions, siblings, football migration.[8] and the emergence and dynamics of new middle classes. In addition to her own field research, Erdmute Alber supervises and accompanies field research in Togo, Ghana, Peru and Kenya. Albert has been co-responsible (together with Nikolaus Schareika) since 2021 in the ongoing DFG project "COVID-19 and nomadic pastoralism in the context of crisis and structural reform in Benin: learning from local risk management".[9] [10]

Selected publications

Monographs

Anthologies and readers

Articles and book chapters

External links

Notes and References

  1. editor's note (2016): „Wissenschaft braucht Zeit” – Ein Interview mit Erdmute Alber ("Science takes time" - An interview with Erdmute Alber). Sociologus, vol. 66, No. 1, Manufacturing Beauty, Grooming Selves: The Creation of Femininities in the Global Economy (2016), pp. 1-8
  2. https://figurationen.ch/index.php/autorinnen/new-biografie/ AutorInnen - Erdmute Alber
  3. http://www.ethnologie.uni-bayreuth.de/de/team/Alber_Erdmute/Wissenschaftlicher_Werdegang/index.html Biography of Erdmute Alber, homepage of University of Bayreuth
  4. https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783839402719-017/pdf short CV of Erdmute Alber
  5. http://www.ethnologie.uni-bayreuth.de/de/team/Alber_Erdmute/Aemter_und_Funktionen/index.html Prof. Dr. Erdmute Alber: Derzeitige Ämter und Funktionen
  6. Silke Jakob: Das Leben einer Forscherin bei den Baatombu. Eine Ethnographie sozialer Elternschaft. (Review of: Alber, Erdmute: Soziale Elternschaft im Wandel. Kindheit, Verwandtschaft und Zugehörigkeit in Westafrika. Berlin: Reimer, 2013. In: KULT_online, vol. 43 (2015)
  7. https://rework.hu-berlin.de/fellows-de/id-2011-2012.html Fellows 2011/2012 - Professor Erdmute Alber
  8. ForMig-Projekt: "Fussballmigration - ein Traum von Europa und seine Wirkung auf das Deutsche Ausländerbild". Bayerischer Forschungsverbund 'Migration und Wissen' (ForMIG)
  9. https://gepris.dfg.de/gepris/projekt/468375783 COVID-19 und nomadischer Pastoralismus im Kontext von Krise und Strukturreform in Benin: von lokalem Risikomangement lernen
  10. Anja-Maria Meister: Expertin der Universität Bayreuth fordert mehr weibliche Stimmen in der Politikberatung. idw - Informationsdienst Wissenschaft, 13 May 2020