'''Eric B. Ross''' "lectures at the Institute of Social Studies, The Hague." <ref>[http://us.macmillan.com/author/ericbross Eric B. Ross], Macmillan, accessed April 20, 2009.</ref> He is the editor of the political magazine, [[The Porcupine]]. <ref>[http://www.theporcupine.org/about/ About], The Porcupine, accessed April 21, 2009.</ref>
==Fellowships and Grants<ref>[http://www.iss.nl/content/download/3677/35667/version/4/file/Eric+Ross+CV.pdf CV], Institute of Social Studies, accessed April 20, 2009.</ref>==
*Columbia University Faculty Fellowship, 1969-73
*Columbia University Latin American Institute Summer Field Research Grant, 1970
*ICCO ([[Interchurch Organization for Development Co-operation]]) grant ($160,000 for one and a half years) for development of research program and conference on general theme of "Land Policies, Social Provisioning and Public Action,'' 2004 (with [[Haroon Akram-Lodhi]] and [[Cristobal Kay]])
==Consultancies<ref>[http://www.iss.nl/content/download/3677/35667/version/4/file/Eric+Ross+CV.pdf CV], Institute of Social Studies, accessed April 20, 2009.</ref>==
*Consultant, [[UNFPA]], preparation of background book for Mexico City Population Conference, 1983-84
*Member, Consultative Panel, Division of Arab States and Europe, [[United Nations Population Fund]], 2005
*[[Marvin Harris]] and Eric B. Ross, ''Food and Evolution: Toward a Theory of Human Food Habits'' (Temple University Press, 1987).
*Marvin Harris and Eric B. Ross, ''Death, Sex, and Fertility: Population Regulation in Preindustrial and Developing Societies'' (Columbia University Press, 1990).
*Eric B. Ross, ''The Malthus Factor: Population, Poverty and Politics in Capitalist Development'' ([[Zed Books]], 1998).[http://www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/item.shtml?x=52215 Review] [http://artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/blurb/Malthus%20Agribusiness.pdf another review]
==Other Select Selected Articles==
*Eric B. Ross (1986), "Potatoes, Population and the Irish Famine: The Political Economy of Demographic Change", In W. Penn Handwerker (ed.), Culture and Reproduction: An Anthropological Critique of Demographic Transition Theory. Boulder: Westview Press. Pp. 196-220.
*Eric B. Ross (1996), "[http://www.biotech-monitor.nl/2607.htm Malthusianism and Agricultural Development: False premises, false promises]," ''Biotechnology and Development Monitor'', No. 26, p. 24.
*Eric B. Ross (1998), "The Malthus Factor: Population Ideology in Capitalist Development," In S. Essers and N. Koning (eds.), ''The Population Bomb? Discussions on Demography''. Wageningen: Studium Generale Landbouwuniversiteit. pp.27-48
*Eric B. Ross (1998), "Malthusianism, Counter-Revolution and Green Revolution," ''Environment and Organization'', 11(4): pp.446-50.
*Eric B. Ross (2000), "[ The Malthus Factor: Poverty, Politics and Population in Capitalist Development]," The Cornerhouse Briefing 20. July.*Eric B. Ross (2003), "[ Malthusianism, Capitalist Agriculture and the Fate of Peasants in the Making of the Modern World Food System]," ''Review of Radical Political Economics'', 35(4): pp.437-461.*Eric B. Ross (2006), "[ http://theporcupine.org/?p=4 AIDS and Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Critical View]," ''The Porcupine'', 5 February.
*Eric B. Ross, "Sub-Saharan Africa, Kenya and the Malthusian Paradigm in Contemporary Development Thinking," In [[Michel Pimbert]] (ed.), Reclaiming Knowledge for Diversity. London: Earthscan.
*Eric B. Ross, "Peasants on Our Minds: Anthropology, the Cold War and the Myth of Peasant Conservatism," in [[Dustin Wax]] (ed.), ''Anthropology at the Dawn of the Cold War''. London: London: Pluto Press, Pp.108-132.
==Resources and articles==