Mankind Quarterly

The Mankind Quarterly is a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to physical anthropology and cultural anthropology and is currently published by The Council for Social and Economic Studies in Washington, D.C. It contains articles on human evolution, intelligence, ethnography, languages, mythology, archaeology, race, etc. It aims to reunify biology with anthropology. The journal was founded in 1960, and originally published in Edinburgh, Scotland, by the International Association for the Advancement of Ethnology and Eugenics.

Many of those who constitute the publication's contributors, Board of Directors and publishers are connected to the academic hereditarian tradition. This journal has been criticized by some as being political and racist.

According to defenders, Mankind Quarterly has never been afraid to publish articles in taboo areas, including behavioral group differences and the importance of mental ability for individual outcomes and group differences. During the "Bell Curve wars" of the 1990s, it received attention when opponents of The Bell Curve publicized the fact that some of the works cited by Bell Curve authors Herrnstein and Murray had first been published in Mankind Quarterly. In the New York Review of Books Charles Lane referred to The Bell Curve's "tainted sources," noting that seventeen researchers cited in the book's bibliography had contributed articles to, and ten of these seventeen had also been editors of, the Mankind Quarterly, "a notorious journal of 'racial history' founded, and funded, by men who believe in the genetic superiority of the white race."

Its sister journal is Roger Pearson's Journal of Indo-European Studies, which also receives major funding from the Pioneer Fund. Pearson received over a million dollars in grants from the Pioneer Fund in the eighties and the nineties.

This journal should not be confused with the longstanding Australian anthropological journal "Mankind", now known as "The Australian Journal of Anthropology" or "TAJA".

Founders

 * Robert Gayre, Scottish anthropologist and supporter of race science
 * Henry Garrett, Chair of Psychology at Columbia University from 1941 to 1955. A Virginia-born segregationist, Garrett was a key witness defending segregation in the landmark case Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. Helped organize an international group of scholars dedicated to preventing race mixing, preserving segregation, and promoting the principles of early 20th century eugenics and "race hygiene."
 * Roger Pearson Member of the Eugenics Society in 1963, became a fellow in 1977 and editor in 1978.
 * Corrado Gini Wrote The Scientific Basis of Fascism in 1927.
 * Ottmar von Verschuer German human biologist and eugenicist primarily concerned with "racial hygiene" and twin research.
 * Reginald Ruggles Gates

Contributors

 * Alain de Benoist
 * Chris Brand
 * Raymond Cattell
 * Brunetto Chiarelli
 * Darl Dumont
 * Hans Eysenck
 * Marija Gimbutas
 * John Glad
 * Robert Klark Graham
 * Ronald Immerman
 * Seymour Itzkoff
 * J.W. Jamieson
 * Subhash Kak
 * Kenneth Lamb
 * Richard Lynn
 * J.P. Mallory
 * Herbert Matare
 * R. A. McConnell
 * Gerhard Meisenberg
 * Edward M. Miller
 * Matthew Nuenke
 * R. T. Osborne
 * Edgar Polome
 * Stanley Porteus
 * J. Philippe Rushton
 * Jared Taylor
 * Del Thiessen
 * Marian Van Court
 * Tatu Vanhanen
 * Volkmar Weiss
 * Glayde Whitney

Editors

 * Roger Pearson
 * J. Gladykowska-Rzeczycka
 * J. Balslev Jorgensen
 * J.J. Helen Kaarma
 * David de Laubenfels
 * T.L. Markey
 * Umberto Melotti
 * H.F. Mataré
 * Clyde E. Noble
 * Ralph Rowlett
 * Frederick Streng
 * Charles C. Susanne
 * Volkmar Weiss

External link

 * The Mankind Quarterly