What is World Development all about?

Many people would argue that the journal, World Development, is one of the most pre-eminent publications in the field of development. Knowing that, I decided to search it for articles on Haiti. My search resulted in two articles that actually contain the word Haiti in the title: one on collective action and watershed management published in 1995 and the other on taxation in the coffee economy published in 1993.

In addition to these two Haiti-specific articles, my search produced another 244 articles that include content about Haiti or the Caribbean.

World Development started in 1973. It publishes a volume each year with an issue each month. Each issue contains anywhere between 8-15 articles. Let’s assume an average of 10 articles per issue. That’s 120 articles a year over a period of 36 years for a total of 4320 articles published since the beginning.

And only two have the word Haiti in the title. The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere is apparently of almost no interest to “mainstream” development scholars and experts.

Image: “New Mission, Laugon, Haiti,” from Flickr user glasshalffull91, licensed with Creative Commons.

What low-income Haitians want: lessons for aid-givers

In rural Haiti, before entering anyone’s yard, one calls out : “Onè! (Honor!), waiting to hear the welcome, “Respe!” (Respect) before entering. Cultural anthropologist Jennie Smith-Paríolá did long term fieldwork with “peasant” groups in Haiti’s Northeast, Central Plateau, and Grand Anse regions. She learned much about the values of honor/respect and how they infuse Haitians ideas of right and wrong and the kind of life that humans ought to be able to have.

Many countries and organizations are committed to helping Haiti recover from the devastation of the earthquake and to move ahead to build a stronger country than existed before. The shock of the earthquake’s toll in terms of mortality, loss of family and loved ones, and physical destruction is serving as a wake-up call to the Haitian government and to other countries and institutions that something, now and onwards, seriously, must be done to help the Haitian people achieve a better future.

Typically, countries and organizations tend to give the kind of aid that they tend to give…regardless of the context of the place and people in need. Among other forms of help, the US has sent in the military. In fact, as of today’s newspaper accounts, the US is in charge of the airport and the majority of planes landing carry US military. Planes bringing food and water are being held back.

Patterns of giving are entrenched and hard to change. But they must be. While the US military no doubt  serves an important role in helping to retrieve bodies and maintain order in what is an increasingly desperate situation, aid efforts should not ever be dominated by “military aid.”

Smith-Paríolá worked with and learned from the poor and disempowered of rural Haiti, many of whom have formed small-scale community organizations to provide services and to organize production and trade. From them, she heard incisive critiques of outsiders’ concepts of progress, democracy, and development. She listened to their aspirations and their views of how outsiders need to change. Read her book, When the Hands Are Many: Community Organization and Social Change in Rural Haiti. It conveys the voices, aspirations, and even songs of the people.

Here is what poor Haitians define as elements of a good society:

1. relative economic parity
2. strong political leaders with a sense of service who “care for” and “stand for” the poor
3. respe (respect)
4. religious pluralism to allow room for ancestral and spiritual beliefs
5. cooperative work
6. access of citizens to basic social services
7. personal and collective security

Smith-Paríolá notes that aid organizations have contested the first two of these: the first is seen as counter-productive to economic progress and the second as counter-productive to democratic principles.

In terms of respe, David Brooks’ editorial (see Samuel Martínez’s response here) in the New York Times on January 14 is a good example of the lack thereof among many outsiders.

The fourth point, from the local people’s viewpoint, can be achieved even though many people are affiliated with Protestant or Catholic missions. They feel that religious/spiritual pluralism is viable and that different belief systems are mutually informing.
Working in groups is part of rural life. It is accompanied by laughter, songs, jokes, games, and sometimes drinking. Collective play and performance “heat up” labor. Aid agencies often look down on what they perceive as rowdy and undisciplined behavior.
The sixth point is currently beyond the reach of most rural Haitians. It includes adequate schooling (primary and secondary schools with teachers and regular hours of operation), literacy training for adults, decent transportation (just a nearby road), farming equipment (hoes, machetes, plows, fertilizers, pesticides), “Western” health care (an adequate clinic within walking distance), a fair judicial system (providing equal justice to the poor), enough land to live on (land redistribution), and a healthier environment.

As the government is increasingly unable to provide for people’s livelihoods and other forms of basic needs, unrest has also increased. Crime rates have risen steeply in Port-au-Prince and also, to some extent, in rural areas. More and more often, Haitians voice concerns about feeling safe.

The lessons are clear: major changes are required in the culture of big aid organization, in how they define need, what kinds of help they provide and how they provide it. They must form coalitions with Haitian community groups based on a practiced respe that honors differences and similarities in values. They must reframe their thinking to look at the shortcoming of the powerful and wealthy rather than of the poor. Most importantly, following the values of poor Haitians, economic inequality must be reduced to the extent that if one person is eating, everyone is eating.

How to do this? A first step is that big aid givers  have to abandon their authoritative knowledge of what’s best for Haiti and listen to the Haitians. This strategy means that the typical architecture of big aid will come crumbling down just like so many buildings struck by the earthquake. A different kind of reconstruction is in order: collaborative, culturally-informed aid must replace the age-old top-down kind of aid.

The people of Haiti need help, but on their terms. Let’s start with respe and move on from there.

Image: “Map of Haiti,” from Flickr user DrGulas, licensed with Creative Commons.

Recent sources on Haitian culture and social change

This list is intended to provide a guide to recent resources on culture and society in Haiti for people who wish to be better informed about the context in which the recent earthquake and its devastation are occurring. With apologies, most of the journal articles are not public access.

Furthermore, we really encourage everyone to visit InterAction’s Haiti response page, which includes a variety of ways to help out.

Benoît, C. 2007. “The politics of vodou: AIDS, access to health care and the use of culture in Haiti”. Anthropology in Action 143, 59-68.

Coreil, J. & Mayard, G. 2006. “Indigenization of illness support groups in Haiti”. Human Organization 652, 128-139.

Curci, S. 2008. “Mapping Haitian history: a photo essay”Journal of Haitian Studies 142, 120-30.

Farmer, P. 2004. “An anthropology of structural violence.” Current Anthropology 453, 305-325.

Farmer, P. E. 2001. “The consumption of the poor: tuberculosis in the 21st century.” Ethnography 12, 183-216.

Farmer, Paul. 1992. AIDS and Accusation: Haiti and the Geography of Blame. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Farmer, P. E. 2008. “Mother courage and the future of war.” Social Analysis 522, 165-184.

Giafferi, N. 2004. The violence of relations in fieldwork: the Haitian example. Terrain 43, 123-40, 159.

Guilbaud, P., & Preston, M. 2006. “Healthcare assessment study in Les Cayes, Haiti: towards a framework for rural capacity development and analysis”. Journal of Haitian Studies 122, 48-69.

Hastings, A. 2007. “Eradicating global poverty: is it really achievable?” Journal of Haitian Studies 132, 120-134.

James, E. C. 2004. “The political economy of “trauma” in Haiti in the democratic era of insecurity”. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 282, 127-149.

Continue reading “Recent sources on Haitian culture and social change”

Short term ethnographic consultancies for the U.S. census

From the Washington Association of Professional Anthropologists (WAPA):

The U.S. Census Bureau seeks up to 18 ethnographers to conduct short-term paid contract research for 4-6 months during Census 2010 data collection operations. The study aims to address the issue of persistent differential census miscounts of some race/ethnic subpopulations. Contract ethnographers will receive training at the Census Bureau, then conduct coordinated evaluations of enumeration methods and census coverage in designated race/ethnic communities. The researcher will go to a designated race/ethnic site for 7-9 continuous days during a census data collection operation. He/She will accompany a census interviewer, observe and tape the census interview, then conduct an on-the-spot ad hoc debriefing to resolve any anomalies in who should be counted in the household and/or in household structure.

The researcher will observe/tape/debrief in 35 households, prepare transcripts and case studies, and write a site report identifying types and sources of coverage error, which types of households and persons are at coverage error risk, and other factors affecting enumeration as well as assessing the extent to which coverage errors vary among race/ethnic groups. We seek experienced qualitative researchers who have done or are currently doing research in the U.S. in one or more of the following race/ethnic communities: American Indian (reservation), Alaska Native, African American, Asian, Hispanic/Latino, Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander, Middle Eastern, and non-Hispanic white. To be considered, each researcher must be a U.S. citizen, send in all application materials, and must commit in writing to do the research in his/her designated research site for 7-9 days during one of these three time periods: March 29-April 9 (Indian reservation), May 5-22 (the other sites), or August 30-September 30 (all sites).

For more information on the study and how to apply, please send an e-mail with “Request for Information on 2010 Census Evaluation Contracts” in the subject line to all three of the following: Laurel.K.Schwede@census.gov, Rodney.Terry@census.gov, and Matthew.Clifton@census.gov.  The deadlines for sending in complete applications are February 1 (for the Indian reservation in March) and February 10 for the Indian reservation in August and for all other sites from March to August.

Call for papers on women and men

From the official website of the Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology, published by the University of Bucharest Departments of Sociology and Social Work:

The Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology invites articles, research notes, and book reviews for its first issue, “Women and Men.” Submitted articles and research notes should explore differences and similarities in experiences and perspectives of women and men around the globe, in various historical and cultural contexts. Papers that illustrate, explain and discuss the gendered construction of social institutions and individual life trajectories are welcome.

Deadline for submission is January 21, 2010. Send to: journal.compaso@gmail.com

This issue aims to explore:

  • What patterns of alikeness and dissimilarity between women and men can be found in social research data?
  • How can these patterns be explained?
  • What methods and techniques are best suited to investigate gender differences and gender effects? What are the methodological pitfalls in quantitative and qualitative comparisons of men and women?
  • How should gender be understood and studied in sociological and anthropological research?

International Perspectives on Cultural Competence in Psychiatry: Conference in April 2010

From the Somatosphere blog:

Each year for the past ten years or so McGill’s Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry has hosted an Advanced Study Institute in Cultural Psychiatry.  The Institute includes a series of month-long courses on cultural psychiatry, methods in health research, culture in clinical contexts, global mental health research and other topics, taught by members of the Division.  The Institute is usually preceded by a series of workshops and a public conference on a particular theme.

The title for next year’s conference, which will be held on April 29 and 30, 2010 in Montreal is: “Rethinking Cultural Competence from International Perspectives.”  The conference will also be held in conjunction with the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of Psychiatry and Culture, which will run from April 29 to May 1, 2010.  You can download the preliminary announcement for the Institute here.  And here is the description of the conference:

In recent years, cultural competence has become a popular term for strategies to address cultural diversity in mental health services. Alternative constructs that have been proposed include cultural safety, humility, sensitivity, responsiveness and appropriateness. Each of these metaphors draws attention to certain dimensions of intercultural work while downplaying or obscuring others. Each perspective is rooted in particular constructions of cultural identity and difference that have social origins. Approaches to cultural competence have been dominated by work in the U.S., which configures cultural difference in specific ways that reflect its history, demography, and politics. In New Zealand, cultural safety has been promoted as a term that draws attention to issues of power and vulnerability resulting from the history of colonization. Work in other countries has favoured other models and metaphors to address diversity. This conference will bring together an international group of clinicians, researchers and educators to critically assess notions of culture competence in clinical care. Sessions will be devoted to a conceptual analysis and critique of cultural competence, strategies for addressing cultural diversity in primary care, the relevance of culture in global mental health, the cultural adaptation of psychotherapy and other clinical interventions, pedagogical approaches to professional training, and ways to improve the cultural responsiveness and appropriateness of clinical services. The conference will conclude with a debate on the future of culture in mental health services.

Download the preliminary Announcement for 2010 ASI.

Upcoming anthro student conference at University of Maryland-College Park

The Practicing Anthropologist Student Association at the University of Maryland, College Park is excited to present an upcoming conference!

“Anthroplus: Collaborative Endeavors and Emerging Trends” will be held Saturday, March 06, 2010 at the Adele H. Stamp Student Union at the University of Maryland-College Park.

Anthroplus is a conference by graduate students for students in the field of anthropology and kin disciplines.  Submissions of paper and poster abstracts about original research, ideas and projects are now welcome, through January 15, 2010.  Preference will be given to graduate students, but all are welcome to submit!  Please limit abstracts to 250 words and include a title, three keywords and your email address.

This event will be open to the public.

Must read: The Maintenance of Life by Frances Norwood

by Barbara Miller

Rumors about end-of-life policies in the US health care reform debate of 2009 loomed large,  enflaming talk about “death panels” that would “pull the plug on grandma.”Anyone who seeks to be informed about alternatives to the current US system (or non-system) for end-of-life care should read Frances Norwood’s book, The Maintenance of Life: Preventing Social Death through Euthanasia Talk and End-of-Life Care–Lessons from the Netherlands.

Dr. Norwood has a PhD from the joint medical anthropology program at the University of California at Berkeley and San Francisco. For her dissertation, she chose an unusual and challenging topic: the day to day experience of dying and death. She decided to carry out fieldwork in The Netherlands because it has the longest legal practice of euthanasia and assisted suicide and is known for its end-of-life policy. She studied Dutch and then spent 15 months in and around Amsterdam accompanying huisartsen (physicians of the home) on their visits to terminally ill people. She interviewed patients, family members, physicians, home care employees, advocates, and researchers. The core of her research is intensive observation and discussions with 10 huisartsen and 25 of their end-of-life patients and their families.

In The Maintenance of Life, Norwood provides poignant narratives of home visits, including those that resulted in the voluntary death of the patient. She laces the narratives together with a convincing analysis of how “euthanasia talk” is a critical component of end-of-life care in The Netherlands.

What is euthanasia talk? According to Norwood, it is a “discourse,” or culturally shaped way of discussing one’s preferred death. Euthanasia itself, while an option in The Netherlands, is rarely resorted to. But euthanasia talk is widespread and has five steps. It begins with an initial request by a patient with the huisarts. Of Dr. Norwood’s 25 participants who were facing the end of life, 14 had made the initial verbal request. No doctor, however, would grant the request immediately. It must be repeated over time, and family members must be involved in the discussion and agree to the choice. All of this makes for an orchestrated pause in the discussions. The second step requires a written statement. A third step involves setting a date for a second opinion. In the fourth step, the patient repeats the request for a euthanasia date and their reason. The fifth step is a euthanasia death.  All along the way, euthanasia discourse is happening.

In The Netherlands, the percentage of euthanasia deaths has been around 2 percent of all deaths since 1990; the percentage of assisted suicides is even lower, around .1 percent. In 2005, fewer than 1 in 10 people who initiated requests died by euthanasia or assisted suicide. Of those who made concrete requests, one in three did so.

Euthanasia policy in The Netherlands, far from pulling the plug on grandma, gives grandma some sense of agency as she faces death, according to Norwood. It helps reduce, to some degree, the pain of “social death” in which a dying person is no longer considered by family members and others to be the whole person they were before becoming terminally ill. Euthanasia discourse thus serves as a kind of therapeutic narrative which helps to retain a person’s social self,  identity, and sense of orderliness. Orderliness and control are, according to Norwood, key features of Dutch culture.

At the end of her book, Norwood offers insights for US health end-of-life policies. She advises that policies and practices that work in The Netherlands are not easily transferrable to the United States for many reasons, both structural and cultural. The US does not have universal health care and a tradition of home-visiting physicians. The emphasis in the US on individualism means that patients, families, and physicians do not typically work together as a collective. The medicalization of death in the US does not allow sufficient attention to non-medical and cost-effective options that can improve the end of life: home care, nursing and personal care, respite for family members, and coordinated case management.

While humane end-of-life options in the US as a whole seem far from those available in The Netherlands, Oregon’s Death with Dignity Act of 1997, which allows Physician Assisted Suicide, is a positive step forward. Clearly, there is a need for a much more comprehensive look at end-of-life options than is provided for through the initiative called National Healthcare Decisions Day (NHDD) — one day a year! And what about provisions in the health care reform package for Medicare to cover the cost of conversations with a physician about end of life choices. A recent request for Medicare coverage for a conversation with a physician about end-of-life options once every five years (!) has met with outraged opposition from Republicans.

Read Fannie Norwood’s book. It’s important, well-written, and will give you much to think about. I hope more cultural anthropologists take up the challenge to study the end of life, social death, and non-medical therapies.

Dr. Frances Norwood spoke about her research on euthanasia in The Netherlands as part of the Culture in Global Affairs series at the Elliott School of International Affairs, October 30, 2009.

Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual book event December 13

Come join members of the Network of Concerned Anthropologists Steering Committee as they discuss their new book The Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual: Or, Notes on Demilitarizing American Society next Sunday at the Shirlington Library, with a signing to follow at Busboys and Poets Cafe down the street.  Please help spread the word.  The event is free and open to all.

The Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual: Or, Notes on Demilitarizing American Society
with Hugh Gusterson, Andrew Bickford, and David Vine

Sunday, December 13, 3:00 p.m.
Shirlington Library
4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington, VA 22206
(703) 228-6545

Book signing and conversation to follow at Busboys and Poets–Shirlington
4251 South Campbell Ave
Arlington, VA 22206
(703) 379-9757

At a moment when the U.S. military decided it needed cultural expertise as much as smart bombs to prevail in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Pentagon’s Counterinsurgency Field Manual offered a blueprint for mobilizing anthropologists for war. The Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual critiques that strategy and offers a blueprint for resistance. Written by the founders of the Network of Concerned Anthropologists, the Counter-Counterinsurgency Manual explores the ethical and intellectual conflicts of the Pentagon’s Human Terrain Team program; argues that there are flaws in the Counterinsurgency Field Manual (ranging from plagiarism to a misunderstanding of anthropology); probes the increasing militarization of academic knowledge since World War II; suggests strategies for resisting the deformation of anthropological knowledge; and proposes alternative visions for U.S. foreign policy. This is compulsory reading for anyone concerned that the human sciences are losing their way in an age of empire. Book discussion will take place at the Shirlington Library followed by a signing at Busboys and Poets.

American Anthropologist launches “Public Anthropology Reviews”

Request for Submission of Review Materials

AAA is pleased to announce the launch of “Public Anthropology Reviews,” a new review section in American Anthropologist.

Public Anthropology Reviews will highlight anthropological work principally aimed at non-academic audiences, including websites, blogs, white papers, journalistic articles, briefing reports, online videos, and multimedia presentations. The editors will also consider other traditional and innovative mechanisms for communicating anthropological research and concepts outside of academic realms and welcome suggestions. Please note that this review section will complement existing review sections and will therefore not review books, films or museum exhibits.

Editors: Melissa Checker (CUNY Queens C), Alaka Wali (Field Museum) and David Vine (American U)

They are now accepting submissions for materials to be reviewed in the June 2010 issue of AA. Please send inquiries, ideas and submissions of materials for review to: publicanthreviews@gmail.com