Brian McKenna, PhD

Associate Professor of Anthropology
Brian McKenna
College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters
Behavioral Sciences
313-593-5520
schedule Thursdays 12:00 - 1:00 on Chat (Also, by Appt. , Phone or Zoom)

Teaching Areas:

Anthropology

Research Areas:

Medical Ethics, Neoliberal Culture, Primary Care Systems

Biography and Education

Brian McKenna, Ph.D. is a medical/environmental anthropologist and journalist with over three decades of experience as an applied, public anthropologist. He received a B.A. in Communication Arts from Temple University, an M.A. in Anthropology from Temple University, and a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Michigan State University.

Before joining the faculty at University of Michigan-Dearborn, Dr. McKenna worked as a health policy analyst for several non-profits in Philadelphia, as the developmental specialist for National Public Radio's 鈥淔resh Air with Terry Gross,鈥 and as an environmental health researcher for the Ingham County Health Department in Michigan.

Teaching Interests: Medical Anthropology; Anthropology, Health, and the Environment; Indians of North America; Doing Anthropology (i.e., Anthropology research methodology); Psychological Anthropology

Research Interests: Applied Anthropology; Medical and Environmental Anthropology; Critical Pedagogy; Neoliberalism and Comparative Political Economy; Public Anthropology and Journalism

Selected Publications and Presentations

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淢edical Education for What? Neoliberal Fascism Versus Social Justice,鈥 Journal of Medical Humanities, 2021, 42, 587-602. 

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淧lanetary Health Requires Planetary Medicine: Stepping Outside Educational Siloes to Create a Brave New Way of Healing the World.鈥 10th Annual Conference of inVIVO Planetary Health, Online video presentation, December 2021. 

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淭he Agony of Flint: Poisoned Water, Racism and the Specter of Neoliberal Fascism,鈥 Anthropology Now, 2018, 10, 45-58. 

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淐onfronting Tyranny in a Public Health Agency:  Crafting a 鈥楶hilosophy of Praxis鈥 into a 鈥楥ommunity of Resistance鈥欌 March 2018, in Carl A. Maida and Sam Beck, Eds., 鈥淕lobal Sustainability and Communities of Practice.鈥 Berghahn: London. 

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淎nthropology at the Red-Green Crossroads,鈥 November 2017, in Liam J. Leonard, Ed., 鈥淕reen Criminology & Environmental Crime." Emerald: Ireland. 

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淏an Michigan Fracking: The Role of Academic Civic Engagement and Activist Anthropology,鈥 77th Annual Meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology, Santa Fe, NM, March 2017.

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淐onfronting Tyranny in a Public Health Agency: Crafting a 鈥楶hilosophy of Practice鈥 into a 鈥楥ommunity of Resistance,鈥欌 2016, Anthropology in Action, 23, 31-38.

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淭he Collapse of 鈥楶rimary Care鈥 in Medical Education: A Case Study of Michigan鈥檚 Community/University Health Partnerships Project,鈥 2015, In Trish Greenhalgh, Saville Kushner and Jill Russell, Eds., Advances in Program Evaluation volume on Case Study Evaluation. London: Emerald Group Publishing.

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淧aulo Freire鈥檚 Blunt Challenge to Anthropology: Create a Pedagogy of the Oppressed for Your Times,鈥 Critique of Anthropology, 2013, 33(4), 447-475.

McKenna, Brian, 鈥淒ow Chemical鈥檚 Knowledge Factories: Action Anthropology Against Michigan鈥檚 Company Town Culture,鈥 2013, in Carl A. Maida and Sam Beck, Eds., Toward Engaged Anthropology. Berghahn: Oxford.

McKenna, Brian, "The Clash of Medical Civilizations: Experiencing Primary Care in a Neoliberal Culture" Journal of Medical Humanities, 2012, 33, 255鈥272.

Awards and Recognition

  • Eco-Champion Hall of Fame, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (2018)
  • Rudolf Virchow Professional Award, Honorable Mention, Society for Medical Anthropology (2014) 
  • Fellow, Society for Applied Anthropology (2010-present)
  • Faculty Member of the Year, University of Michigan-Dearborn Alumni Association (2009)
  • Academic Service-Learning Faculty Fellowship, Civic Engagement Project, University of Michigan-Dearborn (2006) 
  • Environmental Achievement Award, Ecology Center, Ann Arbor, MI (2002)