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S. Beaud, F. Weber (2010)
Guide de l'enquête de terrain : produire et analyser des données ethnographiques
M. Abélès (2011)
Des anthropologues à l'OMC : scènes de la gouvernance mondiale
W. Whyte (1946)
Street corner society : the social structure of an Italian slumJournal of Criminal Law & Criminology, 35
C. Geertz (1975)
The interpretation of cultures: Selected essays
Mounia Bennani-Chraïbi (2010)
Quand négocier l'ouverture du terrain c'est déjà enquêter. Obtenir la passation de questionnaires aux congressistes de partis marocains, 17
J. Sardan (1995)
La politique du terrain@@@The policy of fieldwork. On the production of data in anthropology: Sur la production des données en anthropologie
B. Müller (2012)
Comment rendre le monde gouvernable sans le gouverner : les organisations internationales analysées par les anthropologuesCritique Internationale, 54
B. Malinowski (2002)
Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An Account of Native Enterprise and Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea
D. Céfaï, M. Carrel, J. Talpin, Nina Eliasoph, Paul Lichterman (2012)
Ethnographies de la participation, 4
[Drawing upon the work of anthropologists and sociologists, scholars in political science and international relations (IR) increasingly rely on ethnographic methods. Based on multiple fieldwork experiences, within secretariats of international organizations and on the field of international interventions, this chapter addresses the relevance of such methods and the challenges of their concrete application in IR. It provides a series of concrete practical tricks to anticipate, prepare and conduct a fieldwork. It considers the different types of participation a researcher can adopt and stresses the various dimensions of observation. Finally, it draws attention to the daily challenges of ethnographic methods and suggests solutions to overcome issues of confidentiality and to deal with the effects of immersion. Ethnographic methods are relevant to cover a wide variety of fields and objects and therefore, as the chapter shows, are appropriate to the study of IR. More precisely, this chapter suggests different ways to adapt ethnographic methods to the specificities of international configurations. Doing fieldwork is required not only to study the relationships that structure the processes of internationalization and globalization but also to test the relevance of academic and indigenous categories produced to understand these configurations.]
Published: Oct 21, 2017
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