Jennifer Birch
University of Georgia
Jennifer Birch is Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Georgia and Editor of the Society for American Archaeology Press. Her research interests include the development of organizational complexity and diversity, particularly among the Indigenous societies of eastern North America, multi-scalar research design, and the occupational histories of communities and regions.
1-14 (14 Records)
Documents
- Bayesian Modelling and Refinement of Iroquoian Regional Settlement Histories (2016)
- Comparing Middle Woodland and Mississippian Period Agglomerations in the Eastern Woodlands of North America (2019)
- Creating Community at Singer-Move: Feasting and Craft Production in a Residential Precinct (2018)
- GINI and the Indigenous Critique: Dynamics of Equality and Inequality in Eastern North America (2023)
- Inferring Iroquoian Architectural Variability from Magnetic Gradiometry (2018)
- Institutional Dimensions of Northern Iroquoian Confederacies and Implications for Contact Period Geopolitics (2024)
- Kinship, Clanship, and the Incorporation of Newcomers in Northern Iroquoian Society (2019)
- Major Implications of the Dating Iroquoia Project: Rethinking Coalescence, Conflict, and Early European Influences in the Lower Great Lakes Region (2019)
- Migration, Dispersion, or Purposeful Relocation?: Flexibility as an Adaptive Settlement Strategy in Northern Iroquoia, ca. A.D. 1300–1650 (2018)
- Multiscalar Community Histories: A Tale of Migration, Aggregation, and Integration in the Lower Chattahoochee River Valley (2016)
- Northern Iroquoian Conflict: From Coercive Adoption to Community Destruction in a Matter of Decades (2023)
- Radiocarbon Chronology-Building and Relational Histories in Iroquoian Archaeology (2021)
- Settlement scaling in the Northeastern Woodlands (2017)
- Why Are We Thinking “Beyond Barbarians”? Interrogating Dimensions of Military Organization in Non-State Societies (2023)