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Applied Anthropology: Tools and Perspectives for Contemporary Practice 2/e

Alexander M. Ervin

Published June 2004 by Allyn & Bacon
Copyright 2005, 304 pp., Paper
ISBN: 0-205-41409-5
List Price:
$38.80

Inventory Status:
In-Stock
   
Summary

The most up-to-date and accessible text on the subject, Applied Anthropology provides students with the skills, perspectives, and methodologies needed when working in today's communities and organizations. An invaluable resource for any student of anthropology, this practical book answers the question, “What can I do with a degree in Anthropology?”

Highlights of the Second Edition:

  • Devotes more attention to international development to highlight the global relevance of anthropological practice outside North America (Chapters 2, 4, & 5).
  • NEW material in Part II, Policy Analysis and Practice, includes a summary of Elizabeth Guillette's research among the Yaqui of Mexico (Chapter 9) and a case study summarizing the work of Kendall Thu and others who have questioned the health, social, and environmental impacts of intensive livestock operations (Chapter 10).
  • NEW material in Part III, Methods For Applied Research, includes Rapid Assessment Procedures (Chapter 14) and the work and ideas of Robert Chambers, a leader in international development (Chapter 15, now entitled “Participatory Research”).
  • NEW tips by Riall Nolan for students thinking about a career as an applied anthropologist (Chapter 17).

Don't Miss These Special Value Pack Options:

Careers in Anthropology by W. Richard Stephens. This set of sixteen profiles raises students' awareness of how a degree in anthropology can help shape their lives and careers. Available at a discount when packaged with any Anthropology textbook.

Anthropology Career Resources Handbook by Margaret A. Gwynne. Contains a comprehensive listing of available resources for 20 different career fields. Available at a discount when packaged with any Anthropology textbook.

Package an ethnography from our New Immigrants Series or Cultural Survival Series with any full-priced Allyn & Bacon text or additional ethnography for only $5.00 more.

Contact your local Allyn & Bacon representative and request special packaging codes to take advantage of these great offers.

Features

  • Draws from the many and varied “real-world” experiences of practicing anthropologists working in non-academic settings such as government, non-profit organizations, and the business community.
  • Helps students build skills and choose careers that will enable them to use their anthropological training outside the classroom.
  • Exposes students to hot topics such as needs assessment, program evaluation, social and environmental impact research, advocacy, rapid research, and participatory research.
  • Features more than 20 case studies that demonstrate a wide variety of anthropological practices.
  • Offers an extensive discussion of the ethics of doing applied research and policy and its analysis.
  • Includes a separate chapter on anthropological practice in environmental issues.
  • Provides students with a set of generalizable “tools” that can be used from setting to setting and domain to domain.


Table of Contents

All chapters conclude with “Summary.”

Preface.

I. INTRODUCTION.

1. Orientations to an Anthropology of Policy and Practice.

Types of Anthropology.

How Does Applied Anthropology Relate to Anthropological Theory?

Some Challenges.

2. A Brief History of Applied Anthropology.

Nineteenth-Century Beginnings.

Applied Anthropology between the World Wars.

World War II and Its Aftermath.

Academic Applied Anthropology and Consulting for Development, 1950-1970.

Applied Anthropology in Canada.

The Emergence of the “New Applied Anthropology” of Policy and Practice: 1970 to the Present.

Other National Traditions of Practice.

3. Ethics in Applied Research and Practice.

The Host Community.

The Client.

The Profession of Anthropology.

The General Public.

Professional Codes of Ethics for Research and Practice.

Informed Consent.

The “Clinical” Model of Informed Consent.

Confidentiality and Personal Rights to Privacy.

Dissemination of Knowledge.

Special Concerns and Dilemmas for Practicing Anthropologists.

Summary: Collaboration and Collegiality in Ethical Consultation.

II. POLICY ANALYSIS AND PRACTICE.

4. What Is Policy and How Does It Relate to Anthropology?

The Many Meanings and Contexts of Policy.

Policy as a Process.

The Significance of Anthropology for Policy.

The Domains of Policy Activities within Anthropology.

Some Roles Taken by Anthropologists in Policy Analysis and Practice.

Some Anthropological Stages of Policy Engagement.

5. Strengths, Weaknesses, and Future Directions in Policy Analysis and Practice.

Case Study of Policy Research and Action: The Comadrona Project.

Anthropological Assets for Policy Analysis and Practice.

Some Barriers “Putting People First” in Policy.

Case Study: An Anthropological Difference in Policy Illustrated through the International Potato Center.

6. Needs Assessment.

What Do We Mean by Needs?

Purposes and Expectations of Needs Assessments.

Models or Types of Needs Assessments.

Methods and Sources of Data for Needs Assessments.

Developing the Right Strategies for Needs Assessments.

Case Study: The Saskatoon Needs Assessment Project.

7. Program Evaluation.

Program Evaluation in the Policy Cycle.

Methodological Considerations: An Emphasis on Measurement in Quantitative Approaches.

Qualitative Approaches.

The Growth of Qualitative Methodologies.

Approaches to Program Evaluation.

Some General Considerations.

Case Study: An Anthropological Evaluation of an American Government Agency.

Case Study: Mexican American Strawberry Co-Op in California.

Case Study: Helping to Enhance Self-Evaluations.

Other Examples of Anthropological Program Evaluations.

8. Social Impact Assessment.

Case Study: The Construction of a “Science” Town in the Canadian Arctic.

The Stages of Social Impact Assessment.

Ethnography and the Ecological Perspective in Social Impact Assessment.

Challenges and Controversies.

9. Some Recent Trends in the Application of Environmental Anthropology.

Disasters and Involuntary Migration.

Environmental Risk Assessment.

Case Study: Anthropology and Ground-Water Contamination.

Case Study: Nuclear Wastes and Risk Assessment.

Political Ecology, the Environment, and Human Rights Advocacy.

Case Study: Uranium Mining on American Indian Reservations.

Case Study: Pesticide Bans and Impacts upon Yaqui Children.

10. Advocacy Anthropology.

“The Truth, Yet Not Necessarily the Whole Truth.”

The Case against Anthropological Advocacy.

Response to the Criticism: The Pro-Advocacy and Anthropology Case.

Research and Technical Writing: An Advocacy Role for Practicing Anthropologists.

Case Study: Anthropology in Court.

Case Study: The Bottle-Formula Controversy.

Lessons from the Nestlé Boycott.

Advocacy for Individuals.

Case Study: Anthropology and Intensive Livestock Operations.

III. METHODS FOR APPLIED RESEARCH.

11. Ethnography: Participant Observation and Key-Informant Interviewing.

Ethnography and Participant Observation.

Key-Informant Interviews.

12. Focus Groups and Other Group-Interviewing Techniques.

Focus Groups.

Nominal Groups.

Delphi Groups or Conferences.

Appendix: Sample Results from a Delphi Conference Held with Service Providers to Immigrants in Saskatchewan.

13. Quantification through Social Indicators and Questionnaires.

Triangulation.

Social Indicators.

Case Study: Anthropological Improvisation Using Indicators.

Survey Questionnaires.

Elements of Questionnaire Design and Administration.

Case Study: Attitudes on Needle Transfer among Injecting Drug Users in Ohio.

Case Study: Programs for Inmates.

14. Rapid Assessment Procedures (RAPs).

The Problem: Policy Makers in a Hurry, Anthropologists Taking Their Time.

What Is Meant by Rapid Assessment.

The Field Manual Approach to RAP: An Example from the Health Field.

Rapid Assessment in Agricultural Development.

Some Cautions and Criteria for Effective RAPs.

Essentials of the Rapid Assessment Process.

Improvisation on the Field Manual Approach.

15. Participatory Research.

Participatory Rural Assessment (PRA).

Participatory Action Research (PAR).

Challenges of Participatory Action Research.

Case Study: Language and Heritage Research in the Northwest Territories.

Case Study: Work with a Blind and Visually Impaired Group on the Topic of Informational Needs.

IV. CONCLUSIONS.

16. Some Principles for More Effective Practice.

Keeping a Policy Focus.

Consulting with Stakeholders.

Communicating Effectively.

Advocacy.

Maintaining a Wide Range of Skills and Upgrading Them.

Maintaining Professionalism and a Sense of Social Responsibility in Ethical Practice.

Emphases on Team and Multidisciplinary Work, Establishing Networks, and Submerging Egos.

17. Becoming a Professional.

Skills and Aptitudes for Practice.

Some Basic Steps toward Getting a Job.

Appendix: Some Course Assignments for Applied Anthropology

Bibliography.

Name Index.

Subject Index.




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