Syllabus/achievement requirements Spring 2020

Course materials are comprised of monographs and online articles.

You can buy the required book from Akademika Blindern bookstore, or  purchase through online booksellers such as amazon.co.uk. Required book can also be borrowed from the University Library (provided the item is held).

If you are away from campus and want to access online articles with UiO subscription, go to Easier off-campus access

Syllabus

Monographs

@ Riall W. Nolan. 2017. Using Anthropology in the World: A Guide to Becoming an Anthropologist Practitioner. New York: Routledge (230 pages).

@ Rob Borofsky. 2019. An Anthropology of Anthropology: Is it Time to Shift Paradigms? (Chapters 1, 3, 4 and 5). Kailua, Hawaii: Centre for a Public Anthropology (153 pages). eBook

@ Jay Hasbrouck. 2018. Ethnographic Thinking: From Method to Mindset. London: Routledge (119 pages).

Online articles

E. E. Evans-Pritchard. 1946. Applied Anthropology. Africa: Journal of the International African Institute 16 (2): 92-98 (7 pages) jstor.org

Signe Howell. 2010. Norwegian Academic Anthropologists in Public Spaces. Current Anthropology 51 (2): S269-S277 (9 pages).

David Mosse. 2013. The Anthropology of International Development. Annual Review of Anthropology 42: 227-246 (20 pages) jstor.org

Dan Podjed, Meta Gorup and Alenka Bezjak Mlakar. 2016. Applied Anthropology in Europe: Historical Obstacles, Current Situation, Future Challenges. Anthropology in Action 23 (2): 53–63 (11 pages). berghahnjournals.com

Barbara Rylko-Bauer, Merrill Singer and John Van Willigen. 2006. Reclaiming Applied Anthropology: Its Past, Present, and Future. American Anthropologist 108 (1): 178-190 (13 pages). jstor.org

Published Nov. 15, 2019 3:27 PM - Last modified Nov. 26, 2019 1:26 PM