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M. Ariel Cascio

Assistant Professor - Center for Bioethics and Social Justice at Michigan State University | East Lansing , United States of America

Subjects:
Anthropology, History
Spoken languages:
English, Italian
Status:
Available for mentoring.
Support Level:
Editing Support, Long-term mentoring and support, Short-term mentoring and support
Support Offered:
Writing, Proofreading, Article planning, Dealing with the publishing process, Language polishing/light editing, Medium/heavy editing, Presentation planning, Proposal development, Publication ethics, Responding to peer review, Study design, Table and figure design, Language editing or proofreading support, Study design, Literature reviews, Theses and dissertation writing, Data analysis, Data management and sharing

Work

Subjects:
Anthropology, History
Research Keywords:
Anthropology, Ethnography, Science and Technology Studies, Qualitative Research, Mixed-Methods Research, Participatory Research, Autism, Asperger, Neurodiversity, Italy, Italian Studies, European Studies, Neuroethics, Bioethics, Research Ethics, Ethics, Disability Studies, Psychological Anthropology, Medical Anthropology, Social Anthropology, Cultural Anthropology, Biopolitics, Subjectivity, Identity, Youth Studies, Adolescence, Medicalization, Stigma
Biography:
Ariel Cascio is an anthropologist and assistant professor in the Center for Bioethics and Social Justice. They undertook training in neuroethics and pragmatic health ethics at the Institut de recherches cliniques de Montréal. Their research focuses on social and ethical issues around autism, cognitive difference and disability, and neurodiversity in Europe and North America, with a particular focus on Italy. Dr. Cascio’s research projects largely center around the questions “what does autism mean?” and “how do groups account for the neurological diversity of their members?” They also conduct research in medical education and uncertainty in medicine and support student endeavors in the medical humanities. This research has been funded, in part, by the U.S.-Italy Binational Fulbright Commission, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, and the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research.

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