Dr Martin Mills

Dr Martin Mills
Dr Martin Mills
Dr Martin Mills

MA (St. Andrews), PhD (Edinburgh)

Senior Lecturer

About
Email Address
m.a.mills@abdn.ac.uk
Telephone Number
+44 (0)1224 272622
Office Address

Department of Anthropology, G1 Edward Wright Building, Kings College Campus. Office Hours: Tuesdays, 2-4pm.

 

 

School/Department
School of Social Science

Biography

Dr. Martin A. Mills is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland and Director of the Scottish Centre for Himalayan Research. He specialises in the comparative organisation and structure of governance in religious, state and medical institutions. He has previously lectured and researched at the universities of Edinburgh, St.Andrews and Sussex. Dr. Mills' principal research focus is the anthropological study of Tibetan communities, in particular its religious and governmental institutions. Author of Identity, Ritual and State in Tibetan Buddhism: The Foundations of Authority in Gelukpa Monasticism (Routledge 2003), he has carried out fieldwork in Tibet, Ladakh, China, Northern India and Scotland over the last thirty years. He is a Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute and member of the Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and Commonwealth, as well as member of the International Association for Tibetan Studies and the International Association of Ladakh Studies. 

The Scottish Centre for Himalayan Research (SCHR) is an interdisciplinary research centre focused on the Tibetan Plateau and Hindu Kush-Himalaya. Amongst its public duties is to provide research-level briefings to policy makers and parliamentarians, with research and secretariat support provided to the Scottish Parliament's Cross Party Group on Tibet since 2007.

Read the SCHR's latest report to the Scottish Parliament, Climate Change on the Third Pole: Causes, Processes and Consequences (2021). 

Memberships and Affiliations

Internal Memberships

Director, Scottish Centre for Himalayan Research,

Elected Staff Representative to University Court,

Senior Personal Tutor (Social Sciences).

External Memberships
  • Chairman, Aberdeen China Studies Group
  • Member, Executive Committee of the International Association of Ladakh Studies;
  • Member, International Association of Tibetan Studies;
  • Member, Scottish Parliament Cross-Party Group on Tibet;
  • Fellow, Royal Anthropological Institute;
  • Fellow, Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and Commonwealth.
Research

Research Overview

All anthropologists tend to have two specialisations: one theoretical, the other substantive. 

Theoretically, Dr Mills' major research interest lies in the comparative study of authority - whether in political, religious, medical or educational spheres - as a function of legitimate governance. This is not simply in terms of the imposition of command, but also the creation and organisation of social and theoretical truths within populations, and the formation of consensus. Thematically, this core research focus involves a general specialisation in the comparative organisation and structure of governance in religious, state and medical institutions. 

In substantive and ethnographic terms, Dr Mills' primary research interest lies in the anthropology of Tibet and Tibetan-speaking areas, and in particular its religious and state life. Over the last three decades, this has involved a progression of research projects focused on the ceremonial nexuses of Tibetan monastic and state life.Such projects have involved the formulation of new ways in which modern ethnographers of Tibetan regions can integrate their work with textual specialists and indigenous scholars to create an historical anthropology of the region.

Current Research

Ritual and State in Tibetan History

Since 2003, Mills has engaged in extensive research on the indigenous constitutional history of Tibet. This has involved three main areas of research: the study of the political history of the Ganden Podrang, the Dalai Lama's government at Lhasa from 1642 to 1959, and in exile since 1959; the philological study of medieval and modern manuscripts as they relate to Tibetan understandings of legitimate governance, in particular its own mythology of divine Buddhist kingship; and the ethnographic and historical study of the Ganden Podrang's ceremonial practices of statecraft.

At the heart of these issues is a theoretical concern with four issues:

  • The importance of ceremony and ceremonial understandings of statecraft - rather than mere belief - as the basis for the daily functioning and sovereignty of religious states.
  • The formation of mythological and constitutional and narratives as the basis for indigenous solidarities and political consciousness, both in the past and the modern day;
  • The study of indigenous relations with the land and landscape as an central aspect of ceremonial sovereignty.
  • The place of conflict and warfare in religious states such as historical Tibet.

Collaborations

As Director of the Scottish Centre for Himalayan Research, Dr Mills is Secretary of the Scottish Parliament's Cross-Party Group on Tibet, and a member of the Cross-Party Group on China and the Westminster All-Parliamentary Group on Tibet. In his advisory role for these groups, he has authored and co-authored parliamentary briefing papers on public protest, human rights, religious regulation, political sovereignty and international law and environmental change on the Tibetan Plateau (see Publications). He is also Chairman of the Aberdeen Chinese Studies Group.

In doing so, Dr Mills has maintained a wide variety of fruitful collaborations, including amongst others:

Teaching

Teaching Responsibilities

Research Supervision Areas

  • Political anthropology and the anthropology of the state
  • Medical Anthropology
  • Tibetan and Himalayan systems of governance.
  • Buddhist monasticism and ritual
  • Religion and the state
  • Modern religious movements and insurgencies

Postgraduate Taught

  • SL5010 Principles of Research Design
  • SL5006 Research Skills

Undergraduate

  • AT2005 Political Anthropology (groups, nations and movements)
  • AT4525 The Constitutional Imagination (anthropology of the state)
  • AT3540 Medical Anthropology
Publications

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  • La double figure du moine: Monachisme et maisons

    Mills, M.
    Moines et moniales de par le monde: La vie monastique au miroir de la parenté. Herrou, A., Krauskopff, G. (eds.). Editions L'Harmattan, pp. 161-171, 11 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • This Circle of Kings: Modern Tibetan Visions of World Peace

    Mills, M.
    Boundless Worlds: An Anthropological Approach To Movement. Kirby, P. (ed.). Berghahn Books, pp. 95-114, 20 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Issues of Sovereignty in the Sino-Tibetan Dispute: Briefing paper No.2 of the Scottish Parliament's Cross-Party Group on Tibet

    Mills, M., Scottish Parliament's Cross-Party Group on Tibet
    . 12 pages.
    Other Contributions: Other Contributions
  • The 2008 Protests in Tibet: Main Facts & Analysis

    Mills, M.
    Unknown Publisher. 4 pages
    Books and Reports: Other Reports
  • Small Shoes and Painted Faces: Possession States and Embodiment in Buddhist Ladakh

    Mills, M.
    Modern Ladakh: Anthropological Perspectives on Continuity and Change. Van Beek, M., Pirie, F. (eds.). Brill Academic Publishers, pp. 139-152, 13 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Re-Assessing The Supine Demoness: Royal Buddhist Geomancy in the Srong btsan sgam po Mythology

    Mills, M.
    Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, vol. 3, THL #T3108
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • Roaring Mice: A comment on Ingold and Mesoudi, Whiten and Laland (AT 23[2])

    Mills, M. A.
    Anthropology Today, vol. 23, pp. 24-25
    Contributions to Specialist Publications: Letters
  • Whither the Straw Man? A Response to Toni Huber

    Mills, M.
    The Tibet Journal, vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 47-56
    Contributions to Journals: Articles
  • The Silence in Between: Governmentality and the Academic Voice in Tibetan Diaspora Studies.

    Mills, M.
    Critical Journeys: The Making of Anthropologists, pp. 191-206, 15 pages
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
  • Funeral Practices in Tibet.

    Mills, M.
    Davies, D. (ed.) Encyclopedia of Cremation, pp. 398-399, 1 page
    Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters
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