Doing fieldwork: Ethnographic methods for research in developing countries and beyond

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Abstract

Making use of his own research experiences in Papua New Guinea, Southern Ontario, and Newfoundland, Wayne Fife teaches students and new researchers how to prepare for research, conduct a study, analyze the material (e.g. create new social and cultural theory), and write academic or policy oriented books, articles, or reports. The reader is taught how to combine historic and contemporary documents (e.g. archives, newspapers, government reports) with fieldwork methods (e.g. participant-observation, interviews, and self-reporting) to create ethnographic studies of disadvantaged populations. Anthropologists, Sociologists, Folklorists and Educational researchers will equally benefit from this critical approach to research.

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Fife, W. (2005). Doing fieldwork: Ethnographic methods for research in developing countries and beyond. Doing Fieldwork: Ethnographic Methods for Research in Developing Countries and Beyond (pp. 1–174). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781403980564

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