Scholarship and Biography

Godoy is a cultural anthropologist who draws on insights from evolutionary biology and economic theory to formulate hypotheses about the effects of market exposure, globalization, or modernization on the well-being and the use of natural resources of indigenous people. He collaborates with biological and cultural anthropologists from Northwestern University, the University of Georgia, and the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona in a study called the Tsimane¿ Amazonian Panel Study (TAPS). The research team carries out annual survey waves in which they measure a wide range of socioeconomic, demographic, health, and psychological indicators.


Besides Bolivia and the study of globalization, he has done and continues to do randomized control trials of a wide range of interventions among native Amazonians in Bolivia.

Honors

Heller Teaching Award
Brandeis University (United States, Waltham), 2009
Panel, IGERT
National Science Foundation (United States, Arlington) - NSF, 2002
Panel, Cultural Anthropology
National Science Foundation (United States, Arlington) - NSF, 1999-2002
President's Fellowship
Columbia University (United States, New York) - CU, 1977-1978

Organizational Affiliations

Professor Emeritus, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University

Education

Columbia University in the City of New York
Ph.D.
University of Chicago
M.A.
Harvard University
M.P.A.
Tufts University
B.A.