Conference Organisers:
Conference Administrator:
Anthropology's enduring interest in people's knowledge systems has recently attracted the attention of development policymakers and practitioners. 'Indigenous knowledge' has emerged with the focus on popular participation and planning-from-below. It has opened up opportunities for anthropology to engage practically as never before. How might it further contribute to, and learn from this current burgeoning of interest, which has taken it somewhat by surprise? We have some adjusting to do to play a full part in these exciting events. They augur a revolution in anthropological method and theory in the new millennium, communities no longer research subjects but participants. We have much to contribute to, and learn from the ensuing interdisciplinary engagement. This conference will explore these opportunities and their implications. They touch upon many contemporary issues, including some difficult political ones. Do we need further to professionalise our identity and credibility to meet these challenges? When does indigenous knowledge research court unacceptable social and political interference, when do the demands of development agencies threaten to result in unacceptable misunderstanding? The conference will challenge the stark 'local' and 'global' polarity, and question knowledge making processes that separate technology from power and politics. There is a need to investigate portrayals of 'indigenous knowledge', and the 'production of locality', as countering universalising western science. Recent anthropological concern with the cultural and historical specificity of development policy casts scientific discourse and 'global knowledge' as more contingent and 'local'. An historical/regional perspective warns against reification of 'indigenous knowledge'. Anthropology has a wealth of experience and much to offer the indigenous knowledge movement. We wish the conference to assess how it can do so more effectively by exploring a number of issues:
The above represent a few of the possibilities that we think fall within the scope of the Conference and we are open to further suggestions. Deadlines
1 July, 1999
1 September, 1999
1 December, 1999
1 February, 2000
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Send to:
Alan Bicker
Department of Anthropology, Eliot College, University of Kent at Canterbury, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NS, UK. Tel: +44 (0)1227 823686, Fax: +44 (0)1227 827289
e-mail: a.bicker@ukc.ac.uk
or
Paul Sillitoe
Department of Anthropology, University of Durham, 43 Old Elvet, Durham, DH1 3HN, UK. Tel: +44 (0)191 374 2856, Fax: +44 (0)191 374 2870
e-mail: paul.sillitoe@durham.ac.uk.