- Shelton H. Davis
Shelton H. Davis was a Sector Manager in the Social Development Unit, Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development, Latin America and Caribbean Region (LCSES) at the
World Bank inWashington, D.C. where he was responsible for the Bank's work onsocial development , including tribal andindigenous peoples , civil society, resettlement, etc. He was PrincipalSociologist in the Social Development Department from its creation in 1997 to August 1998. Between 1991 and 1997, he served as Principal Sociologist in the World Bank's central Environment Department; and before this, he worked in the Latin America and Caribbean Region's Environment Division.Between 1984 and 1986, he was a visiting scholar at the
OAS Inter-American Commission on Human Rights where he conducted a study of international mechanisms for protecting the human rights of forest-dwelling Indian populations in lowlandSouth America . He was also the founder and director of a hemispheric Indian documentation center called Indigena, Inc. in Berkeley,California (1973 1975), and the "Anthropology Resource Center" inBoston ,Massachusetts (1975 1984).He has written extensively on indigenous peoples, environment and development issues in Latin America, and his book "Victims of the Miracle: Development and the Indians of Brazil" (Cambridge University Press, 1977) is considered a classic in the field. He is also the author of "Land Rights and Indigenous Peoples: The Role of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights" (Cultural Survival, 1988); and the editor of "Indigenous Views of Land and Environment" (The World Bank, 1993) and, "Traditional Knowledge and Sustainable Development" (The World Bank, 1995).
Dr. Davis has taught at the
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro ,Harvard University ,University of California, Berkeley , theMassachusetts Institute of Technology ,Boston University ,Clark University , theUniversity of Massachusetts and most recently atGeorgetown University .He received his undergraduate degree in Sociology and Anthropology at
Antioch College (1965) and hisPh.D. inSocial Anthropology fromHarvard University (1970). He also did special studies in Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics and Political Science (1963 and 1964), and doctoral research among Mayan Indians inGuatemala (1967 1969).Publications
*"Victims of the Miracle": Development and the Indians of Brazil (Cambridge University Press, 1977)
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