Publication | Closed Access
Reclaiming Applied Anthropology: Its Past, Present, and Future
303
Citations
44
References
2006
Year
Cultural HeritageEthnohistoryEducationSocial PracticeContemporary CultureCognitive AnthropologySocial SciencesTransdisciplinary PerspectiveMedical AnthropologyInclusive RubricFeminist ScholarshipApplied AnthropologyCritical TheoryInterdisciplinary StudiesHistory (African Historiography)EthnomethodologyCultureSocial FoundationsEthnographyAnthropologyEngaged AnthropologySocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologySocial Diversity
Growing concerns about anthropology's impact in both academia and the broader social arena have led to calls for more “public” and more relevant anthropology. In this article, we expand on these exhortations, by calling for systematic joining of critical social theory with application and pragmatic engagement with contemporary problems. We argue for the repositioning of applied anthropology as a vital component of the broader discipline and suggest that it should serve as a framework for constructing a more engaged anthropology. In revisiting disciplinary history and critiques of applied anthropology, we demonstrate the central role that application has played throughout anthropology's evolution, address common misconceptions that serve as barriers to disciplinary integration, examine the role of advocacy in relation to greater engagement as well as the relationship of theory to practice, and conclude with an assessment of the diverse work that is subsumed under the inclusive rubric of “anthropology in use.”
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