Aziza Bayou
Aziza Bayou
Graduate Teaching Assistant
Economic anthropology, culture and political economy, public sector labor unions, identities and inequalities, gendered division of labor, social relations of production, ethnographic methods, anthropology of work, anthropology of religion, New Orleans and Caribbean region.
Current Research
My dissertation research utilizes mixed ethnographic methods and a critical political economic methodological approach to analyze and historicize the context and work of the Fairfax Workers Coalition, a grassroots labor union of Fairfax County government workers, to shed light on the challenges and contradictions faced by modern American laborers.
Selected Publications
Forthcoming Anthropology Textbook: Connections: Developing an Anthropological Perspective. (SAGE)
Grants and Fellowships
Fellow in the 2024 Institute for Critical Social Inquiry (ICSI) Summer Seminar with David Harvey
2024-2025 and 2025-2026 Mercatus Center Graduate Scholar
Courses Taught
ANTH 114: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (online and face-to-face sections)
ANTH 313: Myth, Magic, Mind
ANTH 330: Peoples and Cultures of the Caribbean
ANTH 331: Refugees in the Contemporary World
ANTH 395: Work, Technology, and Society: An IT Perspective (Fall 2026)
ANTH 490: Theory, Methods, and Issues II
CULT 325: Globalization and Culture
Education
Current PhD candidate in Cultural Studies
M.A. in Anthropology from Colorado State University
B.A. in Anthropology from George Mason University (summa cum laude)
Recent Presentations
American Anthropological Association (AAA) Annual Meeting Presentation: "Class Conflicts and Dignity in Labor: A Public Sector Union's Struggle to Represent Government Employees" (Nov 2025)
AAA Roundtable: "Ghosts of Empire" (Nov 2025)
Markets and Society Conference Presentation: Analyzing the Structural Marginalization of Commodified Feminized Caregiving Labor in the Contemporary U.S. and Evaluating Programmatic Responses (Oct 2025)