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No aspect of humanity falls outside anthropology's scope. Among all fields studying humans, anthropology uniquely aims to comprehend the full spectrum of human experience across geographical regions and evolutionary timelines through comprehensive, comparative analysis.
Our curriculum emphasizes anthropology's four core branches: biological, archaeological, sociocultural, and linguistic studies. We also excel in forensic and medical anthropology applications. Despite our diverse research areas, we share a unifying purpose: expanding understanding of human identity and origins. All faculty members commit to sharing anthropological insights through education, scholarship, publications, and community engagement. As a department, we prepare students with foundational knowledge across all anthropological specialties, cultivating inquisitive thinkers who grasp our world's intricacies while mastering specific subfield methodologies, theories, and knowledge bases.
Beyond academic positions, anthropology graduates pursue careers in government agencies, international organizations focused on issues like human rights, as well as corporate and industrial sectors.