THOMAS F. LOVE

Professor of Anthropology 8037 SW Kingfisher Way

Linfield CollegeDurham, OR 97224

McMinnville, OR 97128(503) 620-8385 (h.)

Tel: (503) 883-2504; Fax: (503) 883-2635; email:

Website:

FIELDS OF SPECIALIZATION

1) Energy anthropology:energo-politics, energy regimes, socio-cultural consequences of global oil depletion – North America and Andes

2) Rural livelihood strategies:

a) Socio-cultural aspects of sustainability, sustainable human use of neotropical and temperate forest

and other ecosystems; non-timber forest products; ethnobotany

b) Political economy and cultural ecology of small-scale Andean agriculture and pastoralism

EDUCATION

Ph.D. in Anthropology, University of California - Davis, 1983

Dissertation: "Economic Articulations and Underdevelopment in Southern Peru" (with honors)

M.A. in Anthropology, UC-Davis, 1976

M.S. in Ecology, UC-Davis, 1975

Thesis: "Ecological Niche Theory and Human Communities"

B.A. in Anthropology, Columbia University, New York, NY, 1972

PUBLICATIONS

1) Energy anthropology. Energo-politics; socio-cultural consequences of global oil depletion.

Strauss, Sarah, Stephanie Rupp and Thomas Love, eds.

2013 Cultures of Energy: Power, Practices, Technologies. London: Routledge.

Love, Thomas

Under revision “Illuminating Energy Paths in Peru”

2008 “Anthropology and the fossil fuel era” Anthropology Today 24(2), pp. 3-4.

Love, Thomas & David Murphy

2016 Implications of Net Energy for the Food-Energy-Water Nexus; An NSF-funded workshop at

Linfield College, McMinnville, OR, 14-16 January 2016. Award Number: 1541988

Love, Thomas & Cindy Isenhour

2016 Energy and Economy: Re-cognizing High Energy Modernity as an Historical Period. IN Love &

Isenhour, eds., Economic Anthropology, 3:1“Energy and Economy.”

Love, Thomas & Cindy Isenhour, eds.

2016 Economic Anthropology 3:1 “Energy and Economy.” (selected papers from the 2014 meeting of

the Society for Economic Anthropology that we organized)

Love, Thomas & Anna Garwood

2013 “Electrifying Transitions: Power and Culture in Cajamarca, Peru” IN Strauss, Rupp & Love, eds.

Cultures of Energy: Power, Practices, Technologies.Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.

2011 “Wind, sun and water: Complexities of alternative energy development in rural northern

Peru.”Rural Society 20:294-307.

2) Rural livelihood strategies:

a) Socio-cultural aspects of sustainability. Rural livelihoods, sustainable development of neotropical and temperate forest ecosystems; non-timber forest products; ethnobotany

Fajardo, S., A. Sours and T. Love

Under revision Medicinal Plant Use at EsSalud’s Complementary Medicine Clinic, Trujillo, Peru. Indian J

ofTraditional Knowledge.

Love, Thomas

2012 “Food System Sustainability on Campus: Plugging into Local Agriculture.” Anthropology at

Large (Bulletin of the Federation of Small Anthropology Programs) 18(1), pp. 9-13.

2002 “Extractive Reserves for the United States? Lessons from the Amazonian Experience” In

Jones, Eric T., Rebecca J. McLain, and James Weigand, eds. Nontimber Forest Products in the

United States, pp. 180-188. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.

1997 Comment on “Winners and Losers: Emerging Ecological Policy.” Human Ecology Review 4(1):40.

1983b "To What are Humans Adapting?" (Review Essay of Moran, E. 1982 Human Adaptability: An

Introduction to Ecological Anthropology.) Reviews in Anthropology 10(4):1-8.

1977 "Ecological Niche Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology: A Conceptual Framework and an

Application." American Ethnologist 4(1):27-41.

Love, Thomas & Eric Jones

2001 "Why is Non-Timber Forest Product Harvesting an “Issue”? Excluding Local Knowledge and the

Paradigm Crisis of Temperate Forestry". J. of Sustainable Forestry 13 (3/4):105-121.

1997 "Grounds for argument: Local understandings, science and global processes in special forest

products harvesting" In Vance, N., ed., Special Forest Products: Biodiversity Meets the

Marketplace. USDA Forest Service General Technical Report GTR-WO-63, 163 pp.

Love, Thomas, Eric Jones & Leon Liegel

1998 “Valuing the Temperate Rainforest: Wild Mushrooming on the Olympic Peninsula Biosphere

Reserve.” Ambio: A Journal of the Human Environment, Special Report No. 9, pp. 16-25.

Liegel, Leon, D. Pilz & T. Love

1998 “The MAB Mushroom Study: Background and Concerns.” Ambio: A Journal of the Human

Environment, Special Report No. 9, pp. 3-7.

Liegel, Leon, D. Pilz, T. Love & E, Jones

1998 “Integrating Biological, Socioeconomic, and Managerial Methods and Results in the MAB

Mushroom Study.” Ambio: A Journal of the Human Environment, Special Report No. 9, pp. 26-33.

Love, Thomas & Joel Marrant

1987 Quiet Catastrophe: Social and Cultural Aspects of Harney County (OR) Flooding. The Journal of

the Shaw Historical Library 2(1):35-46.

Moles, J.A., J.L. Blomberg, T.F. Love & J.A. Thompson

1975 Family Operated Farms in Colusa County, California: A Preliminary Research Report.

Corvallis, OR: Western Rural Development Center.

b) Political economy and cultural ecology of small-scale Andean agriculture and pastoralism.

Love, Thomas

2017 The “Independent Republic of Arequipa”: Making regional culture in the Andes.Austin, TX: Univ.

of Texas Press. [a Spanish translation is underway with the Press of the Pontificia Universidad

Católica del Perú/Universidad Católica Santa Maria de Arequipa]

Under revision “From SAIS Atahualpa to ‘Sois la luz del mundo’: A case study of religion, energy and

Agrarian reform success in northern Peru.”

2005 “Pequeños Propietarios de la Campiña y los Usos Politícos del Lugar y el Mestizaje” In F.

Palacios, ed.Yuyayninchis: Revista de la Escuela Profesional de Antropología, Vol. 1, pp. 115-136.

Arequipa, Peru: Univ. Nacional de San Agustín.

1989 "Limits to the Articulation of Modes of Production: The Southwestern Peru Region" In Orlove,

B.S., M. Foley & T. Love, eds. State, Capital and Rural Society: Anthropological Perspectives on

Political Economy in Mexico and the Andes. Boulder, CO: Westview Pr., pp. 147-179.

1988 Andean Interzonal Bartering: Why Does It Persist in a Cash-Market Economy? Michigan

Discussions in Anthropology 8:87-101.

1983a "Comment" on Guillet, David "Toward a Cultural Ecology of Mountains: The Central Andes

and the Himalayas Compared." Current Anthropology 24(5):568.

Orlove, B.S., M. Foley & T. Love, eds.

1989 State, Capital and Rural Society: Anthropological Perspectives on Political Economy in Mexico

and the Andes. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

3) Other areas:

Goddard, Ives & Thomas Love

2004a “Oregon, the Beautiful”. Oregon Historical Quarterly 105(2):238-259.

2004b “Oregon.” Soc. for the Study of Indigenous Languages of the Americas Newsletter XXIII:1, pp. 8-10.

Love, Thomas

1999 “Birds of Yamhill County: A Preliminary Checklist.” Wamka.

1990 "Oregon Birds in the Neotropics, or...Neotropical Birds in Oregon?" In Love, Thomas, ed.

“Oregon and the Neotropics.”Oregon Birds 16(1).

1983c California and Latin American Trade. Intercambio 1:25-32.

COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH WITH LINFIELD STUDENTS

Summer 2018 – survey of medicinal plant use in Huanchaco village and cultural domain analysis of

ethnobotanical knowledge in two rural communities, Trujillo, Peru (Elide Sanchez R. and Lizette Becerra

(later withdrew for health reasons) (funded through MHIRT)

Summer 2015 - rebuilding a medicinal plant garden at Chan Chan Archaeological Site, (Sandra Garcia H.,

Kiana Ringuette); survey of medicinal plant use in Moche and Collambay villages, Trujillo, Peru (SGH, KR

and Lorena Alvarez (funded through MHIRT))

Summer 2014 – photodocumentation, website creation, Peru med anth project, Trujillo, Peru (Katelyn

Henson)

Summer 2013 – medicinal plant supply chain, Trujillo and Huamachuco, Peru (Sam Gauksheim)

Summer 2012 - clinic survey on uses of medicinal plants, Trujillo, Peru (Susana Fajardo (funded through

MHIRT), Anna Sours)

Summer 2010 - building a medicinal plant garden at Chan Chan Archaeological Site, Trujillo, Peru

(Charlotte Trowbridge, Josh Ness)

Summer 2009 - rural electrification with renewable technologies, Cajamarca, Peru (Jade Severson,

Martha Inouye)

Summer 2005 - Century Farms and Sustainability in Yamhill County (Sirpa Peterson, Kellly Stewart)

CONFERENCE PAPERS

1) Energy anthropology; socio-cultural consequences of global oil depletion

“Net Energy and the Need to Re-cognize “Familiar” Capitalism as a Stage of Human History” for double

panel “Toward an Energetic Anthropology of ‘Familiar’ Capitalism: Part II”, American Anthropological

Assn.Annual Meetings, Denver, CO, November 2015 [and I chaired the Part I panel]

“♬And we had fun, fun, fun ♫…till we went over the Net Energy Cliff: Cultural Aspects of the Twilight

of the Petroleum Age” Linfield College Faculty Lecture, April 2013 (video on my website)

“’There was no time to be selfish’: Depression-era legacies for a post-peak world” for panel “Come Hell

or High Water: Legacies and landmarks in the cultures of energy”, American Anthropological Assn.

Annual Meetings, Montreal, Quebec, November 2011

“Unconsidered problems with leaving the fossil fuel era” for panel “Cultures of Energy”, American

Anthropological Assn. Annual Meetings, New Orleans, LA, 19 Nov 2010 (I co-organized the session)

“Oil Worlds: People, Places, Petroleum”, panelist at Portland Center for Public Humanities, Portland

State University, 12 October 2010

“Electrifying Transitions:Power and Culture in Cajamarca, Peru” for panel “Ethnographies of

Energy”, American Anthropological Assn. Annual Meetings, Philadelphia, PA, 5 December 2009,

(with Anna Garwood, Latin America Program Manager, Green Empowerment)

“EROEI Constraints on Paths out of the Fossil Fuel Era” for Panel “After Fossil Fuels:Global

Challenges and Local Actions”, Political Ecology Society/Society for Applied Anthropology annual

joint meetings, Santa Fe, NM, 19 March 2009 (I organized the session)

“TEOTWAWKI? Anthropological Perspectives on the End of Cheap Energy” for Panel “After Cheap

Energy:Anthropological Perspectives on the Human Condition in the Wake of Fossil-Fueled

Globalization”, American Anthropological Assn. Annual Meetings, Washington, DC, 2007 (I

organized the session)

2) Rural livelihood strategies:

a) Socio-cultural aspects of sustainable development of neotropical and temperate forest ecosystems; non-timber forest products; ethnobotany

Invited plenary speaker, “Swimming in the sea of special forest products: What are the forces at

work?”, “Special Forest Products: Working Together in a Changing World” Conference, Sunriver,

OR, April, 1998

“Underground and Unseen: Mushrooms and their Harvesters on the Olympic Peninsula, Washington

State”, Soc. for Applied Anthropology, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1998. (I helped organize the session)

“Grounds for Argument: Global Restructuring and Local Practices in Pacific Northwest Specialty

Forest Products Harvesting”, with Eric Jones; Sixth International Symposium on Society Resource

Management, Pennsylvania State University, 1996 (I also organized and moderated the panel)

"Grounds for argument: Local understandings, science and global processes in special forest products

harvesting" OSU Sem. Series "Special Forest Products: Biodiversity Meets the Marketplace", 1995

"'Tappers and Trappers' revisited: Small-scale harvesters of non-timber resources in temperate

forests", Soc. for Applied Anthropology Annual Meetings, Albuquerque, NM, 1995

"Non-Timber Forest Products Extraction in the Pacific Northwest: Who is Involved, and How

Widespread is this Activity?" Society and Natural Resources Biannual Meeting, Madison,

Wisconsin, 1992

"A System of Sustainable Development 'Extractive' Reserves for the Pacific Northwest Temperate

Rainforest," Oregon Academy of Sciences Session on Sustainability (I organized and chaired the

session as well), 1991

"Political Ecology of Sustainable Development Programs in Western Amazonia," Latin American

Studies Assn. Annual Meeting, Miami, Florida, 1989

"Nature Tourism and Neotropical Deforestation: Promises and Pitfalls," Second Symposium on Social

Science in Resource Management, U. of Illinois, 1988

"Coping with Incremental Disaster in Harney County, Oregon," Soc. for Applied Anthropology Annual

Meeting, Reno, Nevada, 1986

b) Political economy and cultural ecology of small-scale Andean agriculture and pastoralism

“Unwelcome Encounters: ‘The Independent Republic of Arequipa’ and the Altiplano” for Panel Andean

Encounters across Difference: New Frontiers, Familiar Stories?” Amer. Anthropological Assn. Annual

Meetings, San Francisco, CA, November 2012

“Fire and Water: The Moral Force of Telluric Symbols in the Political Economy of early Twentieth

Century Arequipa, Peru” for Panel “Sacred Geography in Meso- and South America,” first

Conference of the Int’l. Society for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, Univ. of Florida,

April 2006

“’The Independent Republic of Arequipa’: Failed Nationalism and the Invention of a Folk Tradition,

1890-2002” Linfield College Faculty Lecture, 2002

“Ni chicha ni limonada: The evolution of Arequipeño regionalism" American Anthropological Assn.

Annual Meetings, Chicago, IL, November 1999 (I also organized the session “State-Local

Articulations in SW Peru”)

“Cash Cows and Fighting Bulls: Redefining Identity, Maintaining Control in Southwestern Peru”

Latin American Studies Assn. Meeting, Chicago, IL, 1998

“Ni chicha ni limonada: Rural Arequipa in southwest Peruvian regional identity” Latin American

Studies Assn. Meeting, Guadalajara, Mexico, 1997

"Andean Aftermath: Paths of Conquest and Resistance" Linfield College Columbian Quincentennial

Series, 1993

"500 Years in the World System: What's to Celebrate for 1992? Alternative Readings of Peru in

Crisis" Linfield College Faculty Lecture, 1991

"Andean Bartering: Quaint Vestige or Basis for Sustained Development?" Linfield College Faculty

Lecture, 1987

"Andean Interzonal Barter: Fostering Sustainability through Altitudinal Complementarity," Soc. for

Economic Anthropology Annual Meeting, U.C. Riverside, 1987

"Altitudinal Barter Exchange in the Central Andes," Northwest Anthropological Assn. Annual Meeting,

Salishan, Oregon, 1987

"Fighting Bulls of Southern Peru: Fostering Exchange through Ritual Consumption," Soc. for

Economic Anthropology Annual Meeting, U. of Illinois, Urbana, 1986

"Peasant Class Differentiation in Southern Peru: Constraints Keep Cropping Up," Soc. for Economic

Anthropology Annual Meeting, Warren, Virginia, 1985

"Political Economy, Agrarian Reform and Two Peruvian Peasant Communities," Amer. Anthropological

Assn. Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL, 1983

"The Political Economy of Ethnic Identity in Southwestern Peru," XI International Congress of

Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, Vancouver, BC, 1983

3) Other

“Producing Anthropology as Discipline and Perspective”, AAA 2014 Roundtable, Chair and Co-Organizer

(with Faith Warner)

"Tying Study Abroad Programs into the Home Campus Curriculum," Internat'l. Studies Assn. Western

Regional Meeting, Denver, CO, 1984

"Study Abroad Programs in Latin America: Why So Few?", International Studies Assn. Annual Meeting,

Atlanta, GA, 1984

“Ecological Niche Theory in Sociocultural Anthropology,” Kroeber Anthropological Society XX Annual

Meeting, UC Berkeley, May 1976

BOOK AND VIDEO REVIEWS

I regularly review articles for several journals, includingAmerican Anthropologist, The Journal of Latin

American and CaribbeanAnthropology, Human Ecology: An Interdisciplinary Journal, Biological

Conservation, Anthropological Forum, Social Problems, Energy Research and Social Science,

Anthropological Quarterly.

Published reviews:

1993 Review of Hecht, Susanna & Alexander Cockburn, 1989 Fate of the Forest: Developers,

Destroyers and Saviors of the Amazon. Latin American Anthropology Review 4(1):12-13.

1991 Review of Speiser, E. & D. Irvine, 1990 Runa: Guardians of the Forest (Sachata Huihuac Runa)

(video). Latin American Anthropology Review 3(2).

1988 Review of Stein, William W., ed., 1985 Peruvian Contexts of Change. New Brunswick, NJ:

Transaction. American Anthropologist 90(2):456-457.

1984 Review of Harald O. Skar's The Warm Valley People: Duality and Land Reform among the

Indians of highland Peru. Ethnos 49:140-143.

GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS RECEIVED

National Science Foundation $50,000 (with David Murphy, 8/15) for workshop “Net Energy and the

Food/Energy/Water Nexus”, McMinnville, OR, January 2016

National Science Foundation summer workshop on Cultural Domain Analysis, Beaufort, NC, July 2015

Proof of Concept $9100 award for GIS in the Curriculum project from Northwest Academic Computing

Consortium, Tom Love & Jack Murphy, co-PIs, 5/03

Co-Principal Investigator, U.S. Dept. of State, Man and the Biosphere program $50,000 grant for

research on secondary forest products harvesting, Olympic and Appalachian Biosphere Reserves

comparison; grant period 10/93-9/96

Co-PI, College of Forestry, Oregon State University Sustainable Forestry program $3000 grant for

research on sustainable harvesting of minor forest products; grant period 7/91-6/92

Fulbright Teaching/Research Scholar, Peru, for teaching and research on cultural ecology of protected

areas in Madre de Dios, 1989

HONORS & AWARDS

Member, E4 (Environment, Energy, Economics, Equity) Scholars Network, 2018-date

Chair, AAA (GAD) Federation of Small Anthropology Programs (FOSAP), 2014-date

Housley International Studies Award, Summer 2014

Co-Chair, Soc. for Economic Anthropology 2014 annual meeting on “Energy and Economy”

Allen & Pat Kelley Faculty Scholar Award, 2012-13

Chair (first), Environmental Studies program, Linfield College, 2002-2006

Chair, Sociology/Anthropology Dept., Linfield College, 1990-1997, 2007-2010

Co-recipient, with Ives Goddard, of the 2005 Joel Palmer Award of the Oregon Historical Society for

best work published the previous year in Oregon Historical Quarterly (4/04).

Invited participant, National Non-Timber Forest Products Policy workshop, Silver Falls St. Park, OR

9/03

Invited participant, National Non-Timber Forest Products Policy workshop, Gifford Pinchot Institute,

Washington, DC, 4/00

Invited commentator, Society for Human Ecology workshop “Winners and Losers: Emerging Ecological

Policy”, Oregon State Univ., 9/96

Invited participant in 1995/96 Fulbright Fellowship Review Panel, Washington, DC [declined]

Invited participant, Oregon State Univ. Seminar Series "Special Forest Products: Biodiversity Meets the

Marketplace", Fall, 1995

Invited participant, International Dimensions of Public Values of Natural Resources, US Forest Service,

Pacific NW Research Station Workshop, Univ. of Hawaii East/West Center, 5/94

Invited participant, Public Values of Natural Resources, US Forest Service, Pacific NW Research

Station Workshop, Hood River, OR, 9/91

Consulting geographic editor, West Publishing Co., 1995, 1988

Participant, Partners of the Americas Natural Resource Mngmt Seminar, Antigua, Guatemala, 1987

Invited participant in 1987/88 Fulbright Fellowship Review Panel, Washington, DC [declined]

Anthropology Section Chair, Oregon Academy of Sciences, 1994-1995

Shaw Historical Society award for best paper on Great Basin history, 1987

Boards of Directors Experience:

West Hills Christian School, 2004-2011

Oregon Field Ornithologists, 2000-2003

City of Durham Planning Commission, 2000-2003

Tigard Covenant Church, Pastoral Relations Council, 1991-1995

Friends of the Peruvian Rainforest, 1989-1999

Portland Audubon Society, 1986-1996

Other:

Frequent Guest Lectures in classes and for civic groups: e.g., Oregon State Univ. (3X), Portland State

Univ. (3X),Washington State Univ. (Vancouver),George Fox Univ., OMSI Science Pub, Tualatin History

Center, Portland-Corinto/Portland-Guadalajara Sister Cities, Portland Circulo Espanol, Powell’s Books

TravelSeries, Salem Public Library, Mazamas, Kiwanis (3X), Lions Club (3X), McMinnville Garden Club,

Yamhill County Historical Society, KATU Town Hall on global Warming (11 Sep 1988), Washington

County Peak Oil

COURSES TAUGHT

Global Political Economy; Economic Anthropology and Development

Peoples and Cultures of Latin America and the Caribbean

South America: Peoples and Cultures of the Least-Known Continent

Peoples and Cultures of the Andes (travel courses to Peru 1/88, 6/94, 7/98, and to Ecuador 6/05, 6/07)