Using ethnography to monitor the community health implications of onshore unconventional oil and gas developments: Examples from pennsylvania’s marcellus shale

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Abstract

The ethnographer’s toolbox has within it a variety of methods for describing and analyzing the everyday lives of human beings that can be useful to public health practitioners and policymakers. These methods can be employed to uncover information on some of the harder-to-monitor psychological, sociocultural, and environmental factors that may lead to chronic stress in individuals and communities. In addition, because most ethnographic research studies involve deep and long-term engagement with local communities, the information collected by ethnographic researchers can be useful in tracking long-and short-term changes in overall well-being and health. Set within an environmental justice framework, this article uses examples from ongoing ethnographic fieldwork in the Marcellus Shale gas fields of Pennsylvania to describe and justify using an ethnographic approach to monitor the psychological and sociocultural determinants of community health as they relate to unconventional oil and gas development projects in the United States.

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Perry, S. L. (2013). Using ethnography to monitor the community health implications of onshore unconventional oil and gas developments: Examples from pennsylvania’s marcellus shale. New Solutions, 23(1), 33–53. https://doi.org/10.2190/NS.23.1.d

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