After finishing her B.A. at St. John's College (Santa Fe), studying the Great Books curriculum, Ankeny held an independent Thomas J. Watson Fellowship to explore families' understandings of and responses to Huntington disease risk in England, Scotland, Wales, and Denmark. She then worked for Encyclopædia Britannica (on their Great Books products) and the Paideia Program in Chicago for 3 years. Ankeny received her M.A. in bioethics and philosophy from the University of Pittsburgh, and her Ph.D. under James G. Lennox in the History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Pittsburgh.[3] She also holds a M.A. degree in Gastronomy from the University of Adelaide, where she wrote a thesis on celebratory food habits among immigrants of Italo-Australian and Italian-American origin.[4] Prior to joining the faculty of the University of Adelaide, she was director of the Unit for History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Sydney (2000-2006). She is currently the Deputy Dean Research for the Faculty of Arts and is a Professor of History and Philosophy at the University of Adelaide.
Research
Ankeny's work in the history and philosophy of science concerns the use of scientific models, case-based reasoning, and model organisms. She is currently leading the project Organisms and Us: How living things help us to understand our world.[5] Investigators under the project include Sabina Leonelli and Michael Dietrich. This project investigates the roles of non-human organisms in biological research and how researchers use organisms in 20th and early 21st-century science.
Her expertise also includes bioethics, science policy, migration and food studies. She is the leader of the Food Values Research Group[6] at University of Adelaide. The research group seeks to understand the decision-making processes behind everyday food choices and how they are shaped by social, cultural and historical influences.