James Laidlaw (anthropologist)

James Alexander Laidlaw (born 12 September 1963) is a British anthropologist, who is currently the William Wyse Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge.

[1] He was educated at Park Mains High School in Erskine (at the same time as the future Labour Party politician Wendy Alexander), before going on to attend King's College, Cambridge, as an undergraduate, where he studied social anthropology.

[1] While pursuing his doctoral degree, Laidlaw was appointed a junior research fellow at King's.

[6] His areas of ethnographic research include Asian religions, especially Jainism in India, about which he published a monograph in 1995,[7] and Buddhism in Taiwan.

[8] He has also been among the early proponents of the influential turn to studying ethics in sociocultural anthropology,[9] through his 2001 Malinowski Memorial Lecture,[10] and his 2013[11] "path-breaking book-length construction of the field",[12] The Subject of Virtue, which Webb Keane has described as "a major work that I expect will be a cornerstone of our teaching for a generation.