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EASA Biennial Conference 2006European Association of Social Anthropologists |
Applied anthropology: the old and the new (W073)Location Wills G32 Convenor(s)Jonathan Skinner (Queen's University, Belfast) j.skinner@qub.ac.uk Short AbstractThrough histories and case studies, this panel will consider the trajectory and extension of applied anthropology from its colonial European roots in social anthropology to its status as the modern American fifth-field. Long AbstractIn spite of the differing structure of Anthropology in Europe and the US, both began with practical research, as part of the colonial endeavour. In the context of applied anthropology, why then did anthropology disappear into the academy in the mid 20th century? And why and how did the discipline once again branch out of its university cloisters? In part, the general maturing of the discipline has seen the move of researchers from rural to urban, from exotic to mundane, from far away to close to home, and from theoretical to practical, if such distinctions can be maintained. And in these shifts, there have arisen stigmas and biases concerning the nature of the real anthropologists and real anthropology: applied anthropology and applied anthropologists sometimes considered no-longer anthropologists have suffered from this in their own particular fashion. Applied anthropologists suffer the Janus-faced task of accounting for their status, actions and knowledge accumulation to their informants as well as their fellows. With this history and these experiences and struggles in mind, this panel seeks to explore the relationship between social anthropology and applied anthropology. Submissions are thus welcome in the following areas: history and development of applied anthropology worldwide; case studies in applied anthropology; the relationship between applied anthropology/anthropologists and academic anthropology/anthropologists (personal narratives are welcome); the publication and assessment of applied anthropology; the development of applied anthropology outlets (such as Anthropology in Action, Practising Anthropology); the relationship between applied anthropology and humanistic anthropology; the relationship between theory and method through applied anthropology (from PRA to activity-based ethnography).
This workshop is now closed to new paper proposals. PapersApplied anthropology and interdisciplinary action research: the case of the PETREA programme on agroforestryAbstractPETREA (People, Trees and Agriculture in Africa) was an interdisciplinary action research programme funded by the Danish Cooperation (DANIDA) and aiming at improve local access to trees and tree products in Burkina Faso and Tanzania. The project was divided in two phases, the first one aiming at identifying problems relating to the use of trees, and the second one aiming at identifying realistic solutions. The present paper will discuss the difficulties met when confronting anthropological methods, theories and ethics with colleagues belonging to different disciplines ranging from biology to forestry, animal science, geography and political science. Accommodation in situ instead of in 4-stars hotels, collaboration with local colleagues on an equal footing, open-ended and flexible research projects rather than rigid synopsis designed in Europe, qualitative and long-lasting participant observation rather than quick and dirty questionnaires or PRA, focusing on the reality in the field rather than on reality on paper, or on existing power relations rather than on an ideal and immagined legal world, questioning conventional wisdom (on desertification narratives, on participatory forest management, on devolution, etc.), building on local ideas of social justice rather than on values imported from Europe, accountability of research results towards farmers rather than employers, were some of the aspects of a constant struggle to apply anthropology critically and try to avoid reproducing conventional and cynical ways of doing research and development. Missionaries, Mandarins and Microsoft: anthropology beyond the academyAbstractCo-author: Anne Jepson
Piggy in the middle muck: an anthropologist in the midst of marvellous (yet modest) mayhemAbstractThis paper examines the relatively new trend of including young people in the making of state funded measures and the on-going political processes in Northern Ireland. Drawing from a recent and successful attempt to include some of the most disadvantaged Catholic and Protestant young people in a youth-led survey project over three years in Derry/Londonderry as a case study, the author and previous Head of this project discusses the positives of gaining insight from young people in work such as this.
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