Academics for Black Survival and Wellness - from their website, "Academics for Black Survival and Wellness (A4BL) is a personal and professional development initiative for Non-Black academics to honor the toll of racial trauma on Black people, resist anti-Blackness and white supremacy, and facilitate accountability and collective action. A4BL also is a space for healing and wellness for Black people."
Anti-Black Racism: History, Ideology, and Resistance - Overview of course on anti-racism provided by the University of Pittsburgh
Inclusive Teaching Practices - Toolkit provided by Association of College and University Educators for inclusive teaching - their website is full of resources and additional training opportunities
metooanthro - Provides resources and information about sexual discrimination and harassment specific to anthropology
Project Implicit - Online quizzes that serve to gauge and identify implicit bias
Teaching Outside the Binary - a collection of resources to help educators deconstruct gender binary and support LGBTQ+ students and create a more inclusive classroom.
Society of Black Archaeologists - from their website, "The SBA promotes the proper treatment of African and African diaspora material culture, promotes community engagement and collaborations within the field, raises and addresses concerns related to African peoples worldwide, and highlights past and present achievements and contributions people of African descent have made to the field of archaeology."
American Anthropological Association (AAA) - from their website, "Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association is the world’s largest scholarly and professional organization of anthropologists. The Association is dedicated to advancing human understanding and applying this understanding to the world’s most pressing problems."
Association for Queer Anthropology (AQA) - from their website, "The Association for Queer Anthropology (AQA), formerly known as the Society of Lesbian and Gay Anthropologists (SOLGA), is a section of the American Anthropological Association and was founded in 1988. AQA serves the interests of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and other queer and allied anthropologists in the American Anthropological Association. AQA promotes anthropological research and education on homosexuality, bisexuality, transgender/transsexuality, and other sexual and gender identities and expressions, and their intersections with race, class, disability, nationality, colonialism and globalization. AQA supports and encourages a diverse membership within the AAA and actively seeks to increase that diversity along lines of race, class, disability, nationality, gender, sexuality, and other forms of social difference."
Association of Black Anthropologists (ABA) - a section of the AAA - from their website, "The Association for Black Anthropologists (ABA) was founded in 1970 by a small group of intellectuals who sought to break down barriers that impeded their full participation in the discipline of Anthropology. By creating scholarship that linked anthropological theory to struggles for social justice, these elders transformed anthropology and helped create generations of intellectual leaders."
Black in BioAnth (BiBA) - from their website, "Black in Biological Anthropology (BiBA) is a group of Black scholars who are dedicated to the study of Biological Anthropology." "Black identified biological anthropologists from all career stages and institutions, both academic and nonacademic, are welcome to join."
Dental Anthropology Association (DAA) - from their website, "The Dental Anthropology Association (DAA) is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization which seeks to stimulate interest in dental anthropology, a subfield of biological anthropology. Dental anthropology utilizes the dentitions of humans and other non-human primates—both past and present—to answer questions of anthropological interest."
American Association of Physical Anthropologists (AAPA) - from their website, "The AAPA is the world's leading professional organization for physical anthropologists. Formed by 83 charter members in 1930, the AAPA now has an international membership of over 2,200."
American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS) - from their website, "The American Academy of Forensic Sciences is a multidisciplinary professional organization that provides leadership to advance science and its application to the legal system. The objectives of the Academy are to promote professionalism, integrity, competency, education, foster research, improve practice, and encourage collaboration in the forensic sciences."
Society of Forensic Anthropologists (SOFA) - from their website, "The Society of Forensic Anthropologists (SOFA) is a U.S. based professional organization comprising over 40 practicing forensic anthropologists. SOFA began as small group of anthropologists in civil service discussing ways to collaborate and improve the practice of forensic anthropology."
British Association for Forensic Anthropology (BAFA) - from their website, "The British Association for Forensic Anthropology (BAFA) was established in 2011 under the umbrella of the British Association for Human Identification (BAHID) in order to develop and promote professional standards within the discipline of Forensic Anthropology. It aims to assist UK Forensic Anthropologists with their professional development via mentorship, meetings, and the provision of CPD events. It has its own Committee, Constitution, and professional Code of Conduct which complements the Code of Practice for Forensic Anthropology published by the Forensic Regulator in May 2018."
British Association for Bioarchaeology and Osteoarchaeology (BABAO) - from their website, "Formed in 1998, BABAO promotes the study of biological (or physical) anthropology for the purpose of understanding the physical development of the human species from the past to the present."
American Board of Forensic Anthropology (ABFA) - from their website, "The American Board of Forensic Anthropology was incorporated in 1977 as a non-profit organization to provide, in the public interest and the advancement of science, a program of certification in forensic anthropology."
AAFS Standards Board (ASB) - from thier website, "The AAFS Standards Board (ASB) is an ANSI-accredited Standards Developing Organization with the purpose of providing accessible, high quality science-based consensus forensic standards. The ASB is a wholly owned subsidiary of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences (AAFS), established in 2015 and accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) in 2016. The ASB consists of Consensus Bodies (CB), which are open to all materially interested and affected individuals, companies, and organizations; a Board of Directors; and Staff."
Anthropology subcommittee of OSAC - from their website, "The Forensic Anthropology Subcommittee focuses on standards and guidelines related to application of anthropological methods and theory, particularly those relating to the recovery and analysis of human remains."
Asociación Latinoamericana de Antropología Forense (ALAF) - from their website, "La ALAF es una asociación civil sin findes de lucro fundada en 2003. La ALAF agrupa profesionales de América Latina que se desempeñan en el ámbito de la antropología forense y otras disciplinas forenses. Actualmente, ALAF agrupa profesionales de más de 15 paises y es la agrupación de antropólogos forenses más grande de latinoamerica."
Forensic Anthropology Society of Europe (FASE) - from their website, "Since 2003 FASE, a subsection of the International Academy of Legal Medicine, has grown tremendously in the international scenario of forensic anthropology and forensic sciences in general, promoting training, scientific meetings, research and, in the past two years, certification in FA."
Royal Anthropological Institute (RAI) - from their website, "Certification of forensic practitioners in the UK has gained momentum in recent years although it has proven to be more challenging to achieve for the independent practitioner. This is true for the discipline of forensic anthropology and to address this, the British Association for Forensic Anthropology was formed in 2011. This association has undergone an intensive period of standard setting and validation in partnership with the Royal Anthropological Institute as its professional body. The RAI has a Forensic Anthropology Committee whose main role is to provide oversight of the professional certification process."