Charles Nunn, PhD

Charles Nunn is an evolutionary anthropologist with interests in evolutionary approaches to understand and improve human health.  He and his research group investigate the ecology and evolution of infectious disease, drivers of variation in sleep, and the links between ecology, evolution and global health.  Charlie addresses these questions using phylogenetic methods, mathematical modeling, and through fieldwork in Madagascar, Kenya and other locations.  He is the author of Infectious Diseases of Primates: Behavior, Ecology and Evolution and The Comparative Approach in Evolutionary Anthropology and Biology.  Charlie received his undergraduate degree from Dartmouth College in 1991 and his Ph.D. from Duke University in 1999.  He has held positions at Harvard University, University of California Berkeley and Davis, the Max Planck Institute, and University of Virginia.  Currently, he is a Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology and Global Health at Duke.