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Andrew Vayda Obituary

1931 - 2022
Andrew P. "Pete" Vayda (1931-2022), a leading scholar in human ecology and ecological anthropology, died peacefully on January 15 at his NYC home. Vayda was a distinguished professor; interdisciplinary researcher; and passionate foodie, traveler and lover of life. He will be remembered for his wit; irreverence; zest for intellectual engagement; role as beloved father and grandfather; insatiable curiosity about "why questions;" and fierceness on the squash court.

For over sixty years, Vayda conducted research in New Zealand, Polynesia, New Guinea and Indonesia. He was Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Ecology at Rutgers University (1972-2002), where he founded the Department of Human Ecology, and tenured Professor at Columbia University (1960-1972). He taught courses at numerous other European, North American, Australian and Indonesian universities. From his Rutgers retirement until his death, Vayda was an independent scholar, adjunct professor, and senior research associate at the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR).

Vayda's career encompassed historical, anthropological, ecological and philosophical research. He developed a question-based approach to inquiry that makes causal explanation of events, including human action, the goal. It was first articulated in 1983 as "Progressive Contextualization," then refined as "Event Ecology" and "Abductive Causal Eventism" (ACE). Vayda was also known for his criticisms of others' work for failures of causal reasoning and explanation, and for generalizing and theorizing without adequate evidence. His published works include some hundred articles, three books and four co-edited books. Vayda was founding editor of the journal Human Ecology.

Born in Budapest, Hungary, Vayda came to the U.S. with his mother at 7. He completed his BA and PhD in Anthropology at Columbia University. Vayda's dissertation described Maori warfare before alteration by European weapons and ways. The resulting book, Maori Warfare (1960), became a classic. He joined Columbia's faculty in 1960; conducted extensive field work in New Guinea; and wrote articles interrelating war, economics, and ecology.

By the early 1970s, Vayda was disillusioned with neo functionalist theory, which looked for big ideas to explain cultural similarities and differences, and pervaded the Columbia anthropology department. He left Columbia in 1972 for Rutgers, with a mandate to integrate social sciences and humanities with the biological and agricultural programs of the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences. Vayda initiated a multisited, multidisciplinary research program on peoples' interactions with Indonesia's tropical forests. Over the next 30 years, he worked with UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere program, the University of Indonesia, CIFOR and others on topics like the causes and consequences of forest and peat fires, integrated pest management and deforestation.

A festschrift in Vayda's honor, Against the Grain: The Vayda Tradition in Human Ecology and Ecological Anthropology, was published in 2008. Explaining Human Actions and Environmental Changes, a selection of his essays, was published in 2009, and Causal Explanation for Social Scientists: A Reader (co-editor), came out in 2011. In December 2021, Human Ecology published a tribute to Vayda on his 90th birthday.

Vayda is survived by his daughter Andi Vayda (Juan Carlos Velasquez) and granddaughters Daniela and Maya Velasquez.
Published by New York Times from Feb. 11 to Feb. 12, 2022.

Memories and Condolences
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2 Entries

Lisa M Phillips

September 8, 2022

Andi..I'm very saddened to read of your loss.. your dad certainly seemed to be an extraordinary man.
I only met your mama, I bought her blue Buick for 450$. Do you remember me? Lisa Phillips. I've looked for you over the many yrs. As the song states, you said to me, Don't you forget about me. I hope you are fantastically happy and healthy. 66vettelover@gmail

Rosa Campa Hearne

February 23, 2022

I can hear him laughingly say "yes, but why?" as we discussed a recent article or event - sorely missed and never forgotten!

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