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(associations not based on age, kinship, marriage or territory) play a major role in the lives of students who seek to find meaningful social relationships in a large, urban, largely commuter campus. As a category of social grouping described extensively by anthropologists, common-interest associations are known to be an inevitable byproduct of urbanization, social change, and societal complexity because they are flexible and serve multiple needs. New students arriving at CSUF along with some 35,000 other students face a bewildering array of choices. Structured associations enable them to make friends, express their individuality, articulate their ideas about their goals, interests, and future plans, develop leadership skills, and learn how a department and university function. The Department of Anthropology has a number of common-interest associations or clubs, all coordinated under the umbrella organization of the Anthropology Students Associations (ASA). ASA is chartered under the Associated Students of the University and is open to all anthropology majors at the undergraduate and graduate level; there are no dues.
ASA's most important activity of the year is the Annual Symposium, which is totally student-run, with assistance from a faculty advisor. Members of all special-interest clubs are also members of ASA (thus in some ways it is possible to think of the Anthropology department as having one club, ASA, with special interest groups). Club officers (or club representatives) from ASA and all of the special interest clubs try to meet regularly to share information about activities they're planning, and to plan inter-club collaborative activities. Please contact ASA Email Address: csuf.asa@gmail.com for more information.
All student organizations have participated in various kinds of fund-raising activities, such as have garage sales, selling refreshments at club events, or selling T-shirts and coffee mugs.
Clubs may also apply for funding through the Inter Club Council (ICC). ICC funds may help cover costs such as travel expenses for students presenting papers at professional conferences, as well as helping to fund larger events such as the Annual Symposium. In order to request ICC funds, ASA must elect a representative who will attend all ICC meetings. All funding requests from any of the clubs must go through ASA (as the umbrella organization), after which the ICC representative presents the proposal to the ICC.
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