ISBN:
0203428609
,
9780203428603
Language:
English
Pages:
Online Ressource (xii, 270 pages)
,
illustrations
Series Statement:
ASA monographs v. 39
Parallel Title:
Print version Participating in development
DDC:
307.14
Keywords:
Ethnoscience Developing countries
;
Indigenous peoples Ecology
;
Developing countries
;
Technical assistance Anthropological aspects
;
Developing countries
;
Community development Developing countries
;
Applied anthropology Developing countries
;
Natural resources management areas Developing countries
;
Developing countries
;
Indigenous peoples Ecology
;
Technical assistance Anthropological aspects
;
Community development
;
Applied anthropology
;
Natural resources management areas
;
Ethnoscience
;
Applied anthropology
;
Technical assistance Anthropological aspects
;
Community development
;
Natural resources management areas
;
Indigenous peoples Ecology
;
Ethnoscience
;
Ethnoscience
;
Ethnoecology
;
Natural resources management areas
;
Technical assistance ; Anthropological aspects
;
Community development
;
POLITICAL SCIENCE ; Public Policy ; City Planning & Urban Development
;
Applied anthropology
;
Developing countries
;
Electronic books
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
Participant observation to participatory development: making anthropology work /Paul Sillitoe --Upsetting the sacred balance: can the study of indigenous knowledge reflect cosmic connectedness? /Darrell Posey --Beyond the cognitive paradigm: majority knowledges and local discourses in a non-Western donor society /John Clammer --Ethnotheory, ethnopraxis: ethnodevelopment in the Oromia regional state of Ethiopia /Aneesa Kassam --Canadian first nations' experiences with international development /Peter Croal, Wes Darou --Globalizing indigenous knowledge /Paul Sillitoe --Negotiating with knowledge at development interfaces: anthropology and the quest for participation /Michael Schönhuth --Indigenous knowledge, power and parity: models of knowledge integration /Trevor Purcell, Elizabeth Akinyi Onjoro --Interdisciplinary research and GIS: why local and indigenous knowledge are discounted /John R. Campbell --Indigenous and scientific knowledge of plant breeding: similarities, differences and implications for collaboration /David A. Cleveland, Daniela Soleri --'Déjà vu, all over again', again: reinvention and progess in applying local knowledge to development /Roy Ellen.
Abstract:
This thought- provoking and challenging collection focuses on how anthropologists can define and use indigenous knowledge without compromising anthropological expectations
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index. - Print version record
,
Participant observation to participatory development: making anthropology work
,
Upsetting the sacred balance: can the study of indigenous knowledge reflect cosmic connectedness?
,
Beyond the cognitive paradigm: majority knowledges and local discourses in a non-Western donor society
,
Ethnotheory, ethnopraxis: ethnodevelopment in the Oromia regional state of Ethiopia
,
Canadian first nations' experiences with international development
,
Globalizing indigenous knowledge
,
Negotiating with knowledge at development interfaces: anthropology and the quest for participation
,
Indigenous knowledge, power and parity: models of knowledge integration
,
Interdisciplinary research and GIS: why local and indigenous knowledge are discounted
,
Indigenous and scientific knowledge of plant breeding: similarities, differences and implications for collaboration
,
'Déjà vu, all over again', again: reinvention and progess in applying local knowledge to development
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