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Applying Anthropology. What Is Applied Anthropology? The Role of t he Applied Anthropologist Academic and Applied Anthropology Urban Anthropology Medical Anthropology Anthropology and Business Careers and Anthropology. Applied Anthropology.
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Applying Anthropology • What Is Applied Anthropology? • The Role of the Applied Anthropologist • Academic and Applied Anthropology • Urban Anthropology • Medical Anthropology • Anthropology and Business • Careers and Anthropology
Applied Anthropology • Academic anthropology – includes cultural, archaeological, biological, and linguistic anthropology • Applied anthropology – application of anthropological data, perspectives, theory, and techniques to identify, assess, and solve contemporary social problems • American Anthropological Association (AAA) recognizes two dimensions
Applied Anthropology • Medical • Development • Environmental • Forensic • Physical • Has many applications
Cultural Resource Management (CRM) • Branch of applied archaeology aimed at preserving sites threatened by dams, highways, and other projects • Involves not only preserving sites but allowing their destruction if they are not significant
What Is Applied Anthropology? • Practicing anthropologists practice their profession outside of academia • Applied anthropologists work for groups that promote, manage and assess programs and policies aimed at influencing human behavior and social conditions
The Role of the Applied Anthropologist • Combats ethnocentrism – tendency to view one’s own culture as superior and to apply one’s own cultural values in judging the behavior and beliefs of people raised in other cultures
The Role of the Applied Anthropologist • Identifying needs for change that local people perceive • Working with those people to design culturally appropriate and socially sensitive change • Protecting local people from harmful policies and projects that threaten them • Proper roles of applied anthropologists:
Table 2.1 The Four Subfields and Two Dimensions of Anthropology
Academic and Applied Anthropology • During 1970s, and increasingly thereafter, most anthropologists still worked in academia but others found jobs with international organizations, government, business, hospitals, and schools • About half of students graduating with PhDs in anthropology will have careers outside academia • Academic anthropology grew most after World War II
Theory and Practice • Theory aids practice, and application fuels theory • Anthropology’s systemic perspective recognizes that changes don’t occur in a vacuum • Ethnographers study societies firsthand, living with and learning from ordinary people
Urban Anthropology • Human populations becoming increasingly urban • UN estimates that about a sixth of earth’s population living in urban slums • Urban anthropology is the cross-cultural and ethnographic and biocultural study of global urbanization and life in cities
Urban Anthropology • Robert Redfield focused on contrasts between the rural and urban contexts in the 1940s • In any nation, urban and rural represent different social systems • Applying anthropology to urban planning starts by identifying the key social groups in the urban context • Urban vs. Rural
Medical Anthropology • Disease – scientifically identified health threat caused by a bacterium, virus, fungus, parasite or other pathogen • Unites biological and cultural anthropologists in the study of disease, health problems, health-care systems, and theories about illness in different cultures and ethnic groups
Medical Anthropology • Scientific medicine – distinguished from Western medicine, a health-care system based on scientific knowledge and procedures, encompassing such fields as pathology, microbiology, biochemistry, surgery, diagnostic technology, and applications • Illness – condition of poor health perceived or felt by an individual
Medical Anthropology • Disease varies among cultures • Spread of certain diseases, like malaria and schistosomiasis, associated with population growth and economic development • Different ethnic groups and cultures recognize different illnesses, symptoms, and causes
Medical Anthropology • Naturalistic disease theories – explain illness in impersonal terms • Emotionalistic disease theories – assume emotional experiences cause illness (e.g., “susto”) • Personalistic disease theories – blame illness on such agents as sorcerers, witches, ghosts, or ancestral spirits
Health-care systems • All cultures have health-care specialists (e.g., curers, shaman, doctors) • Curer – specialized role acquired through a culturally appropriate process of selection, training, certification, and acquisition of a professional image; a cultural universal • Beliefs, customs, specialists, and techniques aimed at ensuring health and preventing, diagnosing, and treating illness
Western Medicine • Thousands of effective drugs • Preventive health care • Surgery • Medical anthropologists serve as cultural interpreters between local systems and Western medicine • Biomedicine surpasses non-Western medicine in many ways
Western Medicine • Overprescription of drugs and tranquilizers • Unnecessary surgery • Impersonality and inequality of the patient-physician relationship • Overuse of antibiotics • Despite its advances, Western medicine is not without its problems
Anthropology and Business • Applied anthropologists act as “cultural brokers” to translate managers’ goals or workers’ concerns to the other group • Anthropologists may acquire unique perspective on organizational conditions and problems
Key features of anthropology for business • Cross-cultural expertise • Focus on cultural diversity • Ethnography
Careers in Anthropology • Knowledge about traditions and beliefs of many social groups within a modern nation is important in planning and carrying out programs that affect those groups • Anthropology’s breadth provides knowledge and an outlook on the world that are useful in many kinds of work