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Arjun Appadurai, who is a famous anthropologist was born in 1949 and raised in Bombay, India, and went to the United States to study as well as get Ph.D. at University of Chicago. He was the former University of Chicago professor of anthropology and South Asian Languages and Civilizations, Humanities Dean of the University of Chicago, director of the city center and globalization at Yale University, he was a senior tutor at New College of the Global Initiative, and the Education and Human Development Studies professor at NYU Steinhardt School of Culture. Arjun Appadurai has presided over Chicago globalization plan, as many public and private organizations (such as the Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, UNESCO, the World Bank, etc.) consultant and long-term concern issues of globalization, modernity and ethnic conflicts.  “Some of his most important works include Worship and Conflict under Colonial Rule(1981), Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy (1990), of which an expanded version is found in Modernity at Large (1996), andFear of Small Numbers (2006). He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1997.”[1]

Appadurai held many scholarships and grants, and has received numerous academic honors, including the behavior of residential scholarship science center in Palo Alto Advanced Research (California) and the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, as well as individual research fellowship from the Open Society Institute (New York). He was elected Arts and Sciences in 1997, the American Academy of Sciences. In 2013, he was awarded an honorary doctorate Erasmus University in the Netherlands.

He also served as a consultant or adviser, extensive public and private organizations, including many large foundations (Ford, MacArthur and Rockefeller); the UNESCO; UNDP; World Bank; the US National Endowment for the Humanities; National Science Foundation; and Infosys Foundation. He currently serves as the Asian Art Program Advisory Committee members in the Solomon Guggenheim Museum, and the forum D 'Avignon Paris Scientific Advisory Board.

  1. ^ "American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 May 2011" (PDF).