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The APLA board regrets to announce the resignation of President June Nash.
In making this decision June cited her many new research commitments in
Mexico and Guatemala, and her increasing involvement with the new section
on indigenous peoples in the Latin American Studies Association. APLA
thanks June for her good work for the association during her time as
president and wishes her the best of luck with these new endeavors.
President-elect John Bowen will be stepping in as the new president of APLA.
Through my research, I have come to know many Italian judges and practicing lawyers who think that laws from non-western countries are primitive, or that a real legal system cannot exist in what they consider primitive social groups. Only recently Italian universities have begun to offer legal anthropology courses, most of which focus on immigration issues. During the last three decades, Italy has experienced the arrival of increasing numbers of immigrants and—as the US, Australia and other old immigration-target countries discovered in time—the increasing heterogeneity produced by international migration suggests the utility of interdisciplinary and cross-cultural perspectives, tools and analyses for understanding this newly emerging reality within the transformed nation. Many people are discovering that the Italian education system has not equipped them to deal with these new issues. Italian laws on immigration, refugees and asylum are quite recent. Today public institutions are faced with the arrival of immigrants from North African countries, South and Central American countries, Albania, the former Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, Sri Lanka, China, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Russia, and Ukraine. Italian law practitioners are realizing that it is necessary to become familiar with immigrants’ cultural traditions, legal practices and religious beliefs; to study similar experiences in other countries that have already faced similar influxes of immigrants; and to attend to cross-cultural issues. Today schools, universities and the media are addressing issues like racism, ethnicity and nationalism. While some Italians are discovering a new patriotic spirit, others are constructing Italian nationalism for the very first time; while some are turning to racism, the country as a whole is coming to terms with what it means to be a multicultural society. Because of these new issues, legal anthropology and anthropology in general are gaining new positions in the eyes of Italian society. Many lawyers who deal with immigration issues are recognizing the need for new tools and skills in their jobs. I believe that legal anthropology might have a new life in Italy, thanks to the immigration issue. Please send comments and items of interest to Michelle Bigenho at
mbigenho@hampshire.edu or Daniel Goldstein at
dgoldstein@holycross.edu. |
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