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Lucy Philip Mair

320 bytes added, 19:24, 28 May 2020
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| name = Mair
| honorific_prefix = Miss
| honorific_suffix = MA PhD
| image = File:Mair,_Lucy_Philip.jpg
| birth_date = 1901
| death_date = 1986
| address = London School of Economics, Houghton Street, WC2 <br />18b Wetherby Mansions, SW5 [1949]
| occupation = anthropologist
| elected_ESL =
| elected_ASL =
| elected_AI = 1930.12.16
| elected_APS =
| elected_LAS =
| membership = ordinary fellow<br />| left = 1986 deceased
| clubs =
| societies = Royal Institute of International Affairs<br />International African Institute
}}
== Notes ==
RAI Council 1935-36 Member<br />RAI Council 1936-37 Member<br />RAI Council 1937-38 Member<br />RAI Council 1939-40 Member<br />RAI Council 1940-41 Member<br />RAI Council 1941-42 Member<br />RAI Council 1943-44 Member<br />RAI Council 1944-45 Member<br />RAI Council 1953-54 Member<br />RAI Council 1954-55 Member<br />RAI Council 1955-56 Member<br />RAI Council 1959-60 Member<br />RAI Council 1960-61 Member<br />RAI Council 1973-74 Hon. Secretary<br />RAI Council 1974-75 Hon. Secretary<br />RAI Council 1975-76 Hon. Secretary<br />RAI Council 1976-77 Hon. Secretary<br />RAI Council 1977-78 Hon. Secretary<br />RAI Council 1978-79 Vice President
=== House Notes ===
1930.11.25 nominated <br />1935 Wellcome medal. An anthropologist’s estimate of African colonial policies<br />1986.06.25 death noted
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
Lucy Philip Mair (28 January 1901 – 1 April 1986) was a British anthropologist.[1] She wrote on the subject of social organization, and contributed to the involvement of anthropological research in governance and politics.[2][3]<br />Mair read Classics at Newnham College, Cambridge, graduating with a BA in 1923.[4] In 1927 she joined the LSE, studying social anthropology under Bronisław Malinowski, and commenced ethnographic fieldwork in Uganda in 1931.[2] At Malinowski's direction[5] she spent her time in Uganda studying social change,[4] returning to the UK in 1932 to submit her dissertation and receive her PhD. She began lecturing at LSE the same year, but joined the Royal Institute for International Affairs with the outbreak of World War II. In 1943 she moved to the Ministry of Information, then at the war's end took a job training Australian administrators for work in Papua New Guinea.[2]<br />In 1946 Mair returned to LSE as reader in colonial administration, commencing a second readership (in applied anthropology) in 1952. In 1963 she became a professor, a post she held until retirement in 1968. In 1964 she was made president of Section N of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. She gave the 1967 Frazer Lecture at Cambridge University.<br />Mair was throughout her working life closely involved with the Royal Anthropological Institute:[7] after winning the RAI Wellcome medal in 1936 she was the Hon Secretary from 1974–8 and the Vice-President for the year 1978-9. After her death, the RAI instituted the Lucy Mair Medal for Applied Anthropology in 1997 to commemorate her.[7][<br />
The protection of minorities; The working and scope of the minorities treaties under the League of Nations, Christophers, 1928 <br />An African people in the twentieth century, G. Routledge and Sons, 1934 <br />Welfare in the British colonies, Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1944<br />Australia in New Guinea, Chponeismalditosrs, 1948 <br />Native administration in central Nyasaland, HMSO, 1952 <br />Studies in applied anthropology, Athlone, 1957 Safeguards for democracy, Oxford University Press, 1961 <br />Primitive government, Penguin Books, 1962 The Nyasaland Elections of 1961, Athlone Press, 1962 <br />New nations, University of Chicago Press, c1963 <br />An introduction to social anthropology, Clarendon Press, 1965 <br />The new Africa, Watts, 1967 <br />African marriage and social change, Cass, 1969 <br />Anthropology and social change, Athlone, 1969 Native policies in Africa, Negro Universities Press, 1969 <br />Witchcraft, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1969 <br />The Bantu of Western Kenya: with special reference to the Vugusu and Logoli, published for the International African Institute by Oxford U.P., 1970. <br />Marriage, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1971 African societies, Cambridge University Press, 1974 <br />African Kingdoms, Clarendon Press, 1977 Anthropology and Development, Macmillan, 1984<br />
=== House Publications ===
Mar. 10 1936 read Anthropology and theories of native development
== Related Material Details ==
=== RAI Material ===
census<br />MS 189:1935 wellcome
=== Other Material ===
23,182
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