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CSAC Ethnographics Gallery
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CSAC's Research Projects - New and ongoing

Current research projects of CSAC researchers.




AnthroMethods spacer

Anthropological 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.

AnthroMethods is a collaborative site for sharing information about research methods for social science. It has three sections, AnthroMethods for articles, AnthroTools for software and other research tools, and AnthroResources for links and discussion of resources to support research or research training.

Once registered, you can contribute to any of these sections.

At CSAC in Kent we are extending and developing conventional and computer-based methods for collecting interactive ethnographic data and methods of dynamic data management.

This effort incorporates a substantive project on the creation and transmission of local environmental knowledge. We hope to define 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 will review 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.

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VIMSspacer

The Virtual Institute of Mambila Studies

The Virtual Institute of Mambila Studies seeks to collate and connect the different research and researchers with an interest in the Mambila people of the Nigeria Cameroon borderland and their neighbours; their languages and the area in which they live. We take a broad view of Mambila, including other groups speaking related languages such as Kwanja, Vute, Wawa, Nizaa, Njerep (3 speakers at last count!) Twendi (35 speakers), Tep, and others. Our research is primarily of an anthropological and linguistic nature; abstracts or full texts of papers are available at the site.

The currently available work includes reports on Zeitlyn's research on kinship and language and his annotated version of Meek's early ethnological work in the region, and Connell's comparative linguistic research and work on tone realization in Mambila, as well as a full bibliography of anthropological, linguistic, and related research on Mambila.

VIMS was established by D Zeitlyn in 1995

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Making Tradition in Cook Islandsspacer

Making Tradition in the Cook Islands: Images of the Islands

From 1992 to present Michael Fischer and Wenonah Lyon have been investigating the role and processes of tradition in the Cook Islands, a modern Polynesian island nation located about 1000 km due west of the Society Islands. We will be presenting some of the materials we have collected there, still images, video and sound recordings, as well as the texts which have been based on these. We will also be including material by others with their permission.

To begin things, we are including Mauke Dance a short Quicktime Movie (4 meg.) of 14 seconds of a dance performance by residents of the island of Mauke at the 1993 Agriculture Show on Rarotonga, Cook Islands.

A lot of material has now been cleared for release by the Cook Islanders and will be added as time permits. Sonia Vougioukalou has done her doctoral work on Atiu, and will be adding some of her material.

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Updated Tue Nov 01 08:29:16 GMT 2011
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CSAC's Research Projects - Completed



RITE - Interactive Ethnography - AnthroMethods

Anthropological 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 are extending and developing conventional and computer-based methods for collecting interactive ethnographic data and methods of dynamic data management.

This effort incorporates a substantive project on the creation and transmission of local environmental knowledge. We hope to define 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 will review 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.

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Updated Tue Nov 01 08:46:15 GMT 2011
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CSAC's Research Projects - New and ongoing

Current research projects of CSAC researchers

Archiving a Cameroonian Photographic Studio

Genealogical Relations of Knowledge

spacer AnthroMethods

spacer Paul Stirling's Turkish Village Archives

spacer VIMS

ACCS

spacer Making Tradition in Cook Islands


CSAC's Research Projects - Completed
spacer Documentation of endangered languages and cultures in the Nigeria-Cameroon borderland
RITE - Interactive Ethnography - AnthroMethods
Online fieldwork from Pakistan by Stephen Lyon
Sustainable semi-arid development
2000-2001 A Kent Student is taking part in the Overseas Training Programme
more...

Welcome to the Ethnographics Gallery

Current News, Events and Activities for CSAC and Kent Anthropology

spacer Archiving a Cameroonian Photographic Studio

spacer Visual Anthropology at Kent

spacer Ethnobiology of Europe website

spacer Seeing the ring: A nineteenth century photograph album

spacer Other News about Kent Anthropology


UKC Anthropology
spacer Studying Anthropology at Kent

Kent Student Notes

Kent Anthropologists

UKC Anthropology Society


CSAC thanks the following organisations for their support:
spacer Centre for Sociology, Anthropology and Politics

spacer Economic and Social Research Council

spacer Arts and Humanities Research Council

spacer Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

spacer Medical Research Council

spacer Higher Education Funding Council for England


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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.




Updated Sun Jan 22 20:00:14 GMT+00:00 2006
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CSAC Ethnographics Gallery

Return to CSAC's Ethnographics Gallery
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