AnthroMethods: A resource for social science methods
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Interactive Ethnographic Research Methods:
Reproduction/Transmission of Environmental Knowledge
Projects

Researcb Methods CollageAnthropological research is immersive and interactive - working with people on a day-to-day basis to understand the material circumstances people live in, and how their local viewpoint both adapts to and changes these circumstances. We will extend and develop conventional and computer-based methods for collecting interactive ethnographic data and methods of dynamic data management within a substantive project on the creation and transmission of local environmental knowledge. We are defining aspects of best practice in ethnoecology and computer-assisted ethnographic research and to make these methods accessible to researchers who have limited experience with ethnographic approaches to social research, but who are involved in the application of local knowledge to practical conservation and development initiatives. This requires useful instruments and procedures applicable outside anthropology and the means for integrating the results in a useful way with those of other disciplines.

We are reviewing existing methods relevant to ethnoecology, identifying ways to amplify our ability to apply these using digital media and computers (particularly hand-held computers), develop new methods which produce results that can be integrated with those of other disciplines, improve our formal understanding of qualitative analysis, and investigate and develop prototypic interactive quantitative methods.

Events

Researchers

Dr Michael D Fischer, Dr David Zeitlyn, Prof R F Ellen, Dr Gary J Martin, Dr Rajindra K Puri, Mr Glenn W Bowman, Dr Janet Bagg,
University of Kent
1 November 2002 - 31 October 2005

Context

Anthropologists employ interactive methods for collecting field data. The effectiveness of this immersive approach is increasingly recognised but there are barriers to wider acceptance, such as the length of time needed for field work. We will extend and develop conventional and computer-based methods for collecting, managing and analysing interactive data.

Aims and Objectives

  • Define best ethnographic practice in ethnoecology.
  • To produce results generalisable to any field-based research process.
  • Develop resources to support consolidation, analysis and dissemination of research results.
  • Develop, deploy and evaluate grid-based middleware to support and coordinate the anthropological research process.

Methodological aspects of importance

Develop, and evaluate grid-based middleware to support field-based research processes:

  • using previously developed XML schema as a starting point in identifying new capabilities to support the grid model.
  • carrying out exploratory work on derivational layering and using this in mining resources, project analysis and project management.
Research Design
  • Interviewing and participant observation that is informed by the use of non-textual media such as photographs.
  • Further development of means of coding field notes, interview materials and non-verbal data using XML based protocols.
  • Evaluation of virtual reality techniques as a field method and for analysis
  • Exploratory work on derivational layering.
  • Looking at information theory as a means to assess and compare different qualitative models.
  • Creation of a common platform for tools, techniques and knowledge.
  • Outputs

  • Manuals, protocols and reference tools for online exchange of data, methods and analyses.
  • Three workshops for UK researchers.
  • The Global Diversity Foundation is involved in the user engagement strategy.
  • Working papers will be available via the web.
Contact Name: Dr Michael D Fischer
Email: M.D.Fischer@ukc.ac.uk
Phone: 01227 823144
Website: rite.anthropology.ac.uk



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Updated Sat May 27 04:50:56 GMT+00:00 2006
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CSAC thanks the following organisations for their support:
Centre for Sociology, Anthropology and Politics
Economic and Social Research Council
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Medical Research Council
Higher Education Funding Council for England

About the Ethnographics Gallery

The Ethnographics Gallery is a project of the Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing. It is the direct descendent of the oldest online resource for Anthropology, dating to 1986. While we are giving the Gallery a face lift, please remember there are 20 year old pages within these halls.

We have no funding stream for this site, and so little time to maintain older material so it well may have a bit of a museum effect. Newer material will be appropriately wizzy.


What is the Ethnographics Gallery?

The Ethnographics Gallery is a publication of the Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing. This site contains reports on CSAC research, Teaching materials, and Resources that can be used for planning and executing research, including bibliographic materials, databases of ethnographic material, fieldnotes, descriptors, and software for working with ethnographic data. Suggestions always welcome, but we have no funding stream for this website. It contains materials created since 1986, and many of them are rather unfashionable by today's standards. We do, however, want everything to work! mail suggestions to csac@kent.ac.uk

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History

Our first internet service was begun in November, 1986, followed by our first web site in May, 1993, one of the first 400 web sites. The Ethnographics Gallery was founded in Feburary 1994. Our mission at that time was to provide a forum for anthropologists on the internet, and we helped to launch a number of organisations into cyberspace. Today, we are mostly concerned with novel forms of online publishing, disseminating our research, promoting learning resources, and disseminating information about using computers in anthropological research.

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Updated Sun Jan 22 20:00:14 GMT+00:00 2006
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AnthroMethods: A resource for social science methods

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