On Science, Research Ethics, and Politics: Revisiting Applied Anthropology in the Neoliberal Age
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Büyüksaraç, Güldem
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Applied
anthropology has a long controversial history, usually traced back to the
colonialist and imperialist structures of power and domination (Asad 1973,
Gough 1968, Hymes 1974). Over the past two decades, however, there has been
increased interest in community-engaged research in academia, as evidenced in
the emergence of such sub-disciplines as public archaeology, indigenous
geography, or activist sociology. This recent trend marks a new moment of
self-reflexivity in the historyof
social sciences and humanities, which can be taken as an occasion to consider
the potentials andlimitations
of applied anthropology in the neoliberal age. In this paper, I would like to dwell
on what I call ‘anthropological debt’: the
obligation of ‘giving back’ to the communities we intrude into for research
purposes. My primary concern is whether we can carry out anthropology as a
discipline with transformative, if not revolutionary, potential. How is it
possible to reconcile research with advocacy and action, without reproducing (and
creating new forms of) asymmetries between the researcher and the researched? With
this question in mind, I will discuss the legitimacy and effectiveness of
applied anthropology in engaging with the current social reality, by
accentuating the ethico-political issues involved in this sub-discipline and
reflecting on probable solutions.
Bağlantı
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/33874https://avesis.istanbul.edu.tr/api/publication/2b550ea8-1812-4825-ba74-d5b14e9cb0d0/file
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