| Training Background
Trained as a medical anthropologist (Ph.D.) and
epidemiologist (M.P.H.), Dr. Vance has written about sexuality, health,
and policy; controversies about sexuality, science, and visual imagery;
sexuality theory; and gender, sexuality, and health. She also edited
Pleasure and Danger: Exploring Female Sexuality. She has been the
occupant of the Doris Stevens Chair in Women's Studies at Princeton
University, a Visiting Fellow in Sexualities and Culture at the
Australian National University, a Non-Fiction Fellow at the MacDowell
Colony, and a member of many sexuality organizations. She teaches at in
the Mailman School of Public Health and the Law School.
Current Interests
Carole S. Vance, Ph.D., M.P.H., an anthropologist,
specializes in sexuality, human rights, health, gender, medical
anthropology, cultures of science and biomedicine, and ethnographic
methods. She is the Director of the Program for the Study of Sexuality,
Gender, Health, and Human Rights, a Rockefeller Foundation
post-doctoral residency program designed to encourage new scholarship
about sexuality and rights, and facilitate conversations between
academics, advocates, and activists in the US and internationally. Her
current work focuses on integrating sexuality with human rights
frameworks and claims. Dr. Vance is also involved in many international
programs for research and training in sexuality.
Publications
Vance, C. (2001) Social Construction Theory:
Problems in the History of Sexuality
In Plummer, Kenneth (Ed.). Sexualities: Critical Assessments. London:
Routledge, pp. 356-371.
Vance.C.(2001) Anthropology Rediscovers Sexuality: A Theoretical
Comment. In I. Grewal and C. Kaplan (Eds.), Gender in a Transnational
World. New York: McGraw Hill, pp. 28-31
Vance, C. (in press). Negotiating Sex and Gender in the Attorney
General's Commission on Pornography. In LaFont, Suzanne (Ed.),
Constructing Sexualities. New York: Prentice Hall.
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