Available Formats
Paperback, 3rd edition
Published: 30th May 2002
Hardback, 3rd Revised edition
Published: 30th May 2002
Applied Anthropology: An Introduction
By (Author) John van Willigen
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th May 2002
3rd edition
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
306
Paperback
304
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
This useful volume has proved to be the best survey of applied anthropology. The third edition contains current views of the development process including local knowledge, collaborative research, participatory rural appraisal, cultural action, social marketing, and cultural brokerage as well as a chapter on cultural resource management. Applied Anthropology: An Introduction (3rd edition) is a text focused on the use of the methods and theories of anthropology to solve the practical problems of human communities. It addresses a wide range of problem-solving practices in two large categories: development and research. The development-focused chapters include action research/participatory action research, cultural action, collaborative research, cultural brokerage, and social marketing. The research-focused chapters include social impact assessment, evaluation, and cultural resource management. Each chapter includes a defining statement about the approach considered and discussion of key concepts, a discussion of the basic process, and one or more case studies. These materials are supplemented with chapters on many domains of application and roles which applied anthropologists activate. These are coupled with chapters on the history of the development of applied anthropology, ethics, anthropology in development, and policy. The book concludes with a chapter on work-related issues such as employment and funding opportunities.
"John van Willigen's Applied Anthropology: An Introduction should be required reading for anyone interested in the field. This new edition is testimony to the author's devotion to maintaining a coherent and up to date view of a part of anthropology that is changing and expanding at a very rapid pace. Few among us have even attempted to provide such a comprehensive sense of applied work, and fewer still have been so attentive to practical concerns of those students and practitioners who are becoming our next generation of applied anthropologists." Erve Chambers, Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland at College Park
JOHN VAN WILLIGEN is Professor of Anthropology, University of Kentucky.