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Dive into the research topics where Margaret Everett is active.

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Featured researches published by Margaret Everett.


Journal of Genetic Counseling | 2004

Can you keep a (genetic) secret? The genetic privacy movement.

Margaret Everett

This paper reviews the literature on genetic privacy, especially since 1995 and the first proposal for national genetic privacy legislation. Since that time, a majority of states have passed some form of genetic privacy legislation, and efforts to pass federal legislation are ongoing. Such new laws, however, remain untested in the courts and their effects are unclear. If they fail to provide additional protections against discrimination for most people, their most significant impact may be in their ability to either diminish or enhance the power of genetic information and to influence the way individuals view themselves and others. How does “genetic exceptionalism”—the idea that genetic information is different from other types of medical information—relate to “genetic essentialism”—the idea that we are to a large extent shaped by our genes? Anthropological views on genetics and personhood bring a new perspective to this ongoing debate. Implications for counseling practices are also explored.


Habitat International | 2001

Evictions and Human Rights: Land Disputes in Bogotá, Colombia

Margaret Everett

Abstract Even though many governments in Latin America, including Colombia, have improved the legalization and regularization of peripheral settlements, recognized the right to housing, and acknowledged the United Nations’ position on evictions as violations of fundamental human rights, urban displacement continues. Forced eviction brings devastation to families and neighborhoods and hampers efforts to improve large areas of the city. Over the past twenty-five years in the hills of eastern Bogota, growing competition for land combined with the competing claims of squatters, semi-legal settlements, title-holders and government agencies has led to frequent and sometimes violent land disputes. These disputes result either directly or indirectly from public and private development in the area. This paper will document the history of displacement in this sector of Bogota as a case study in order to evaluate current policy guidelines related to forced displacement. 1 There is a wealth of ethnographic data on the effects of evictions, as documented below, and yet this data, typically in the form of Social Impact Assessment, rarely translates into lasting policy guidelines. Economists, geographers, and other social scientists have also documented the negative effects of forced displacement. This study evaluates current policies from a human rights perspective. I argue that human rights can make land policies not only more equitable but also more efficient in Latin America if our current knowledge about displaced communities can be translated into public policy.


Journal of Contemporary Religion | 2015

Healing the Curse of the grosero Husband: Women’s Health Seeking and Pentecostal Conversion in Oaxaca, Mexico

Margaret Everett; Michelle Ramirez

Abstract Drawing on anthropological research in Oaxaca, Mexico, this article describes the role of health seeking in women’s experiences with Pentecostal conversion. The present study confirms that Pentecostalism’s promise of reforming problematic male behavior is a significant draw for women. Women’s stories of conversion are strikingly consistent in their accounts of male drinking, womanizing, and domestic violence. However, the findings also demonstrate that when efforts to domesticate men fail—and they often do—women still find significant ways in which Pentecostalism addresses suffering. The study provides a unique contribution to the literature by exploring that paradox in detail.


Social Science & Medicine | 2003

The social life of genes: privacy, property and the new genetics

Margaret Everett


Anthropological Quarterly | 1997

The ghost in the machine : Agency in poststructural critiques of development

Margaret Everett


Human Organization | 1998

Latin America On-Line: The Internet, Development, and Democratization

Margaret Everett


Social Science & Medicine | 2011

They say it runs in the family: diabetes and inheritance in Oaxaca, Mexico.

Margaret Everett


American Ethnologist | 2007

The “I” in the gene: Divided property, fragmented personhood, and the making of a genetic privacy law

Margaret Everett


The Annals of Anthropological Practice | 2011

Practicing Anthropology on a Community-Based Public Health Coalition: Lessons from HEAL

Margaret Everett


Practicing anthropology | 2009

Building Evidence to Prevent Childhood Obesity: Lessons from the Portland Healthy Eating Active Living (Heal) Coalition

Margaret Everett; Angie Mejia; Olivia Quiroz

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Michelle Ramirez

University of the Sciences

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