Relation Between Anthropology and Development: Dr. Md. Faruk Shah
Applied anthropology refers to applying anthropological data, perspectives, and methods to address social problems and initiate positive change. Development anthropology focuses on the social and cultural dimensions of economic development. Anthropologists can contribute to development by acting as cultural brokers, identifying local needs and perspectives, evaluating projects, and informing policies. Key methods include participatory action research and addressing the social effects of development projects and economic change from local perspectives to improve outcomes. Anthropological approaches like cultural relativism, thick description, and emic perspectives challenge assumptions and reveal development as a social and cultural process.
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Relation Between Anthropology and Development: Dr. Md. Faruk Shah
Applied anthropology refers to applying anthropological data, perspectives, and methods to address social problems and initiate positive change. Development anthropology focuses on the social and cultural dimensions of economic development. Anthropologists can contribute to development by acting as cultural brokers, identifying local needs and perspectives, evaluating projects, and informing policies. Key methods include participatory action research and addressing the social effects of development projects and economic change from local perspectives to improve outcomes. Anthropological approaches like cultural relativism, thick description, and emic perspectives challenge assumptions and reveal development as a social and cultural process.
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Relation between Anthropology and
Development
Dr. Md. Faruk Shah
Associate Professor Department of Development Studies University of Dhaka & Adjunct Faculty Member Department of Development Studies Bangladesh University of Professionals Applied Anthropology • Applied Anthropology refers to the application of anthropological data, perspectives, theory, and methods to identify, assess, and solve social problems. • “Applied anthropologists ...play role in making plans, implementing those, and thus initiate change in societies they study” (Mair, 1968). • They Identify the needs for change that local people perceive. • Applied anthropologists may protect local people from harmful policies and projects. • Thus they contribute to development in many ways including critics to modernity, policy researcher, evaluator, impact assessor, planner, needs assessor, trainer, advocate, cultural broker. • Cultural brokering is the act of bridging, linking, or mediating between groups or persons of different cultural backgrounds for the purpose of reducing conflict or producing change (Jezewski, 1990) Method of Applied Anthropology: Action Research & Planned Change
• “An action research means a kind of research
which has a definite target and a course of action for positive change. It attempts to uplift and develop the people under investigation…An action researcher not only collects facts but also acts to lead, motivate and organize the people under study for changing their fate towards betterment… ” (Chowdhury & Rahman, 1999). • Involvement is a necessary precondition of action research. Development Anthropology
Development anthropology is a branch of applied anthropology that focuses on
social issues in, and the cultural dimension of, economic development. ‘Development’ is the central point of development anthropology Development anthropologists have long made practical contributions to planned change and policy. Anthropologist accept the role of helping to make development work better by providing cultural information to planners. It also plans and guides policy. Key questions of development anthropology are: How does culture change? How anthropologists can inform and transform the process of international development Anthropology of Development
1. The social and cultural effects of economic change
2. The social and cultural effects of development projects (and why they fail) ‘Top-down’ manner: “plans are made by distant officials who have little idea what the conditions, capabilities or needs are in the area or community which has been earmarked for developmental interventions.” (Robert Chamber’s Rural Development: Putting the Last First) Misunderstanding the context
3. The internal workings and discourses of the ‘aid industry’
Anthropological Perspectives • Holism (considering a wide range of contexts): “refers to the study of the whole of the human condition” (Kottak, 2000:5). • Cultural relativism: a person’s behavior should not be judged by the standards of another culture. • Comparative and cross cultural: it compares data from different populations and time periods • Ethnography (Participant observation): To participate with the activities of people under study as much as possible • Reflexivity “refers to how the studied 'object' of research reacts towards fieldwork” • Thick description: a way of presentation that includes observation and context in which that behavior occurs. • Emic and Etic Approach: insiders’ and outsiders’ views respectively of culture • Tendency to challenge mainstream assumptions Applying Anthropology in Development Work • In the twenty-first century, there is a growing imperative to rethink old ways of doing development. Mainstream frameworks and ways of working are proving woefully inadequate to tackle the challenges of contemporary development practice. This is apparent across all kinds of country contexts. From wealthy countries to poor ones, policy makers are under pressure to understand and respond to development needs in diverse contexts, and to build partnership with diverse social actors. • The anthropology of development sheds light on the social contexts that are at the heart of all development work, from the community centre to the boardroom. Anthropology reveals that development is a social and cultural process, and provides a set of insights that can be used to understand these dynamics and create more effective development outcomes. (Eversole, 2018:16) The time has come for anthropology to consolidate its place in development practice, not merely as frustrated post-project critic but as implementing partner. There are growing demands for its skills and insights to further understanding of agricultural, health and insights to further understanding of agricultural, health, community, and other issues (Sillitoe, 2002:1) Thank You and Questions???