ABSTRACT

Development has too often failed to deliver on its promises to poor nations. The policies imposed from above by international agencies and state bodies have frequently not met the needs and aspirations of ordinary people. Development agencies have been searching for sometime for alternative approaches. One of those being pioneered is 'indigenous knowledge', which aims to make local voices heard more effectively. However while it is increasingly acknowledged in development contexts, it is yet to be validated and accepted by anthropologists. It is self-evident to any anthropologist that effective development assistance will benefit from some understanding of local knowledge and practices. This therefore puts anthropology and anthropologists at the centre of development. This volume focuses on two major issues that anthropology might profitably address. First of all how to define indigenous knowledge and who should define it as it currently lacks disciplinary coherence. Secondly once this definition is achieved what methodologies should be used in such an interdisciplinary research endeavour when it must meet the demands of development (cost- and time-effective, intelligible to non-experts) while not compromising anthropological expectations. The new opportunities and their methodological implications are addressed in the chapters of this book in a range of ethnographic and institutional contexts and demonstrate how wide-reaching and how crucially important this debate has become. Participating in Development is a thought provoking and challenge collection. Its authors both define and validate the role of the anthropologist in development as well of development in anthropology.

chapter 2|19 pages

Upsetting the sacred balance: can the study of indigenous knowledge reflect cosmic connectedness? DA RRELL POSEY

Can the study of indigenous knowledge reflect cosmic connectedness?

chapter 3|21 pages

Beyond the cognitive paradigm

Majority knowledges and local discourses in a non-Western donor society

chapter 4|18 pages

Ethnotheory, ethnopraxis

Ethnodevelopment in the Oromia regional state of Ethiopia

chapter 7|23 pages

Negotiating with knowledge at development interfaces

Anthropology and the quest for participation

chapter 8|27 pages

Indigenous knowledge, power and parity

Models of knowledge integration

chapter 9|17 pages

Interdisciplinary research and GIS

Why local and indigenous knowledge are discounted

chapter 10|29 pages

Indigenous and scientific knowledge of plant breeding

Similarities, differences and implications for collaboration

chapter 11|24 pages

‘Déjà vu, all over again’, again

Reinvention and progress in applying local knowledge to development