Title of article
Identity, ideology and inequality: Methodologies in medical anthropology, Guatemala 1950–1995
Author/Authors
Bruce Barrett، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
9
From page
579
To page
587
Abstract
This paper sketches the history of medical anthropology in Guatemala, focusing on how investigations carried out during the 1950s served as methodological and ideological foundations for subsequent work. Problematic examples from the literature and from the authorʹs experience are used to provide insight into the nature of the anthropologistʹs role in applied research and development. For example, medical anthropologists are often hired to help navigate the gulf between the ideological identities of indigenous peoples and those of biomedical researchers and international development specialists. Instead of recognizing the inherently ethical nature of this work and acting accordingly, many anthropologists have adopted a detached, “scientific” and impossibly value-free perspective. This paper proposes a transformation of this role into one that (1) maintains an independent and critical relationship to mainstream science, (2) elaborates and advocates the indigenous agenda, and (3) adopts an explicitly value-filled ideology, methodology and theoretical framework.
Keywords
ideology , Ethics , identity , Guatemala , methodology , anthropology
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
599279
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