Nam C. Kim is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the current Director of the Center for Southeast Asian Studies on its campus. He holds degrees in anthropology (PhD, University of Illinois at Chicago), political science (MA, New York University), and international relations (BA, University of Pennsylvania). As an anthropological archaeologist, his research deals with early complex societies and the significance of the material past for modern-day stakeholders. He is especially interested in humanity’s global history of organized violence and warfare. Nam has conducted fieldwork in parts of the United States, Mesoamerica, Europe, and Southeast Asia. He regularly gives university lectures covering various geographic regions and important archaeological sites in Asian countries such as South Korea, Japan, Vietnam, China, and Cambodia, and he has traveled extensively throughout the region for research.
Since 2005, he has been conducting archaeological fieldwork in Vietnam at the Co Loa settlement in the Red River Delta. A heavily fortified site located near modern-day Hanoi, Co Loa is connected to Vietnamese legendary accounts and is viewed as an important foundation for Vietnamese culture. He is currently beginning a new project examining the material remains and cultural legacies of “Operation New Life,” which was an American military operation in 1975 that helped resettle thousands of refugees at the end of the Vietnam War. Nam’s work has been featured in various podcast interviews and a documentary (on the History Hit website). He has also authored several articles and books. The Origins of Ancient Vietnam (2015) provides a glimpse into the foundations of Vietnamese civilization, as seen through the archaeological record. Emergent Warfare in Our Evolutionary Past (2018, co-authored with Marc Kissel) provides a comprehensive view on the origins of war within the history of humanity. It seeks to answer the questions about how far back in time we can see warfare, and whether or not organized violence is somehow innate within our species.
Language spoken : English