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spelling Reynolds, Rodney Lange, Isabelle L. 0967-201X 1752-2285 Berghahn Books Anthropology http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/aia.2019.260101 <jats:p>Since the turn of the millennium, conceptual and practice-oriented shifts in global health have increasingly given emphasis to health indicator production over research and interventions that emerge out of local social practices, environments and concerns. In this special issue of Anthropology in Action, we ask whether such globalised contexts allow for, recognise and sufficiently value the research contributions of our discipline. We question how global health research, ostensibly inter- or multi-disciplinary, generates knowledge. We query ‘not-knowing’ practices that inform and shape global health evidence as influenced by funders’ and collaborators’ expectations. The articles published here provide analyses of historical and ethnographic field experiences that show how sidelining anthropological contributions results in poorer research outcomes for the public. Citing experiences in Latin America, Angola, Senegal, Nigeria and the domain of global health evaluation, the authors consider anthropology’s roles in global health.</jats:p> Introduction Anthropology in Action
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spelling Reynolds, Rodney Lange, Isabelle L. 0967-201X 1752-2285 Berghahn Books Anthropology http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/aia.2019.260101 <jats:p>Since the turn of the millennium, conceptual and practice-oriented shifts in global health have increasingly given emphasis to health indicator production over research and interventions that emerge out of local social practices, environments and concerns. In this special issue of Anthropology in Action, we ask whether such globalised contexts allow for, recognise and sufficiently value the research contributions of our discipline. We question how global health research, ostensibly inter- or multi-disciplinary, generates knowledge. We query ‘not-knowing’ practices that inform and shape global health evidence as influenced by funders’ and collaborators’ expectations. The articles published here provide analyses of historical and ethnographic field experiences that show how sidelining anthropological contributions results in poorer research outcomes for the public. Citing experiences in Latin America, Angola, Senegal, Nigeria and the domain of global health evaluation, the authors consider anthropology’s roles in global health.</jats:p> Introduction Anthropology in Action
spellingShingle Reynolds, Rodney, Lange, Isabelle L., Anthropology in Action, Introduction, Anthropology
title Introduction
title_full Introduction
title_fullStr Introduction
title_full_unstemmed Introduction
title_short Introduction
title_sort introduction
title_unstemmed Introduction
topic Anthropology
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/aia.2019.260101