Publications
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Huber, Brad R. & Sandstrom, Alan R. (2018). Reclutamiento, capacitación y práctica de las parteras indígenas. In Saúl Millán (Coor.). & Carlos Guadalupe Heiras Rodríguez (Trans.). Las Culturas Indígenas de México. Atlas Nacional de Etnografía (pp. 377-394). México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.
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Brad R. Huber, William F. Danaher, and William L. Breedlove. Material Resource Investments at Marriage: Evolutionary, Social, and Ecological Perspectives. Ethnology 50(4): 281-304, 2011.
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Fiona M. Jordan and Brad R. Huber (Editors) Special issue: Evolutionary Approaches to Cross-Cultural Anthropology. Cross-Cultural Research 47(2): 91-225, 2013.
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Fiona M. Jordan and Brad R. Huber. Introduction: Evolutionary Approaches to Cross-Cultural Anthropology. Cross-Cultural Research 47(2): 91-101, 2013. doi:10.1177/1069397112471800.
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Brad R. Huber, William F. Danaher, and William L. Breedlove. New Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Marriage Transactions. Cross-Cultural Research, 45(4), 339-375, 2011. DOI: 10.1177/1069397111402466.
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Brad R. Huber. Continuity between pre- and post-demographic transition populations with respect to grandparental investment. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33(1): 28-29, 2010.
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Brad R. Huber and William L. Breedlove. "Evolutionary Theory, Kinship, and Childbirth in Cross-Cultural Perspective," Cross-Cultural Research, 41(2):196-219, 2007.
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Brad R. Huber, Vendula Linhartova, and Dana Cope. Measuring Paternal Certainty Using Cross-Cultural Data. World Cultures 15(1): 48-59, 2004.
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Brad R. Huber, Vendula Linhartova, Dana Cope, and Mike Lacy, Evolutionary Theory and Birth-Related Investments by Kin in Cross-Cultural Perspective, World Cultures 15(1): 60-78. 2004.
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Brad R. Huber. "The Nahua", In Carol R. Ember and Melvin Ember (eds.), Encyclopedia of Medical Anthropology: Health and Illness in the World's Cultures, Volume II: Cultures. Pp. 863-872, New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2004.
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Brad R. Huber and Alan R. Sandstrom (eds.). Mesoamerican Healers. (The ebrary electronic book) Austin, Texas:University of Texas Press, November 2001. Reviews of this book.
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Brad R. Huber and Janet W. Schofield. "'I Like Computers, But Many Girls Don't: Gender and the Sociocultural Context of Computing", In Hank Bromley and Michael Apple (eds.), Education, Technology, Power: Educational Computing as a Social Practice, pp. 103-132, Albany: SUNY, 1998.
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Brad R. Huber and Robert Anderson. "Bonesetters and Curers in a Mexican Community: Conceptual Models, Status, and Gender," Medical Anthropology, 17:23-38, 1996.
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Brad R. Huber and Richard Scaglion. "Gender Differences in Computer Education: A Costa Rican Case Study," Journal of Educational Computing Research, 13(3):271-304, 1995.
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Stanley Wright and Brad R. Huber. "The IMF and Anti-Austerity Protest in Costa Rica: The 1982-83 Electric Rate Strike," South Eastern Latin Americanist, 37(3):38-51, 1994.
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Brad R. Huber. "The Recruitment of Nahua Curers: Role Conflict and Gender," Ethnology, 29:159-176, 1990.
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Janet W. Schofield, Debra Evans-Rhodes, and Brad R. Huber. "Artificial Intelligence in the Classroom: The Impact of a Computer-Based Tutor on Teachers and Students," Social Science Computer Review, 8:24-41, 1990.
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Brad R. Huber. "Curers, Illness, and Healing in San Andrés Hueyapan, a Nahuat-Speaking Community of the Sierra Norte de Puebla, Mexico," Notas Mesoamericanas, 12:51-66, 1990.
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Brad R. Huber. "The Reinterpretation and Elaboration of Fiestas in a Nahuat-Speaking Community of Mexico," Ethnology, 26(4):281-296, 1987.
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Doctoral Dissertation: "Category Prototypes and the Reinterpretation of Household Fiestas in a Nahuat-Speaking Community of Mexico," 1985, Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh, (University Microfilms: Ann Arbor, Michigan 86-00658).
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Brad R. Huber, Antonio Toribio Martinez, and Alan R. Sandstrom. "The Recruitment of Midwives in a Nahuat-Speaking Community of Mexico and the Likelihood of Their Cooperating with Biomedical Practitioners", unpublished manuscript.
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