What makes us different is what makes us human..
Robert M. Hayden
Professor
Robert Hayden received his law degree (1978) and PhD in anthropology (1981) from the State University of New York at Buffalo.
He is an anthropologist of law and politics, and has done extensive work on the reconstruction of states and nations in the former Yugoslavia, following extensive fieldwork there.
He has also done fieldwork in India and among the Senecas of New York state, and has as well written on issues concerning the American legal system and its role in society.
Professor Hayden also holds appointments on the faculty of the Law School and in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, and is Director of the Center for Russian and East European Studies.
rhayden@pitt.edu
Research
Faculty
- Kathleen M. S. Allen
Archaeology, Iroquois, ethnoarchaeology
- Joseph S. Alter
Cultural, India, medical anthropology
- Marc Bermann
Archaeology, Andes, households
- Nicole Constable
Cultural, China, modernity
- Olivier de Montmollin
Archaeology, Maya, states
- Kathleen M. DeWalt
Cultural, Latin America, medical anthropology
- Robert D. Drennan
Archaeology, Latin America, complex societies
- Bryan K. Hanks
Archaeology, Russia, zooarchaeology
- Robert M. Hayden
Cultural, Eastern Europe, law
- Margaret Judd
Physical, Near East, paleopathology
- Terrence Kaufman
Linguistic, Mesoamerica, writing systems
- Katheryn M. Linduff
Archaeology, China, nomads
- Gabriella Lukacs
Cultural, Japan, media
- Emily McEwan-Fujita
Linguistic, Scotland, ethnolinguistic revitalization
- Mark P. Mooney
Physical, comparative anatomy
- Hugo G. Nutini
Cultural, Mesoamerica, social structure
- Leonard Plotnicov
Cultural, US, urban studies
- James B. Richardson III
Archaeology, Andes, ecology
- Harry Sanabria
Cultural, Andes, economic anthropology
- Richard Scaglion
Cultural, Pacific, conflict
- Jeffrey H. Schwartz
Physical, hominids, evolution
- Michael I. Siegel
Physical, functional anatomy, craniofacial
- Andrew J. Strathern
Cultural, Pacific, ethnography