The Real World: Words and Things

1999 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 42-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rob Winthrop

The dysfunctional family that is American anthropology muddles on. A case in point: a much publicized forum on "public interest anthropology" at the 1998 American Anthropological Association meetings, concerned with demonstrating how anthropology can make a contribution to significant national policy debates, managed to avoid any reference whatsoever to applied anthropology. When challenged about this omission, one panelist explained helpfully that applied anthropologists, being of necessity "supplicants" in the marketplace, lacked the independence needed to play a useful role in policy debates. One might have thought that his applied colleagues-having spent their careers in work shaped by policy decisions—would be in a good position to comment on matters of public policy, but apparently not.

1997 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Winthrop

In organizing a forum on anthropology and public policy at the 1985 American Anthropological Association meetings, Walter Goldschmidt recalled that it was quite easy to attract three responsible Washington officials to the panel (including Claiborne Pell, ranking minority member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee), but that finding three anthropologists willing and able to participate proved extremely difficult. "Anthropologists," said Goldschmidt, "know that they have important things to say with respect to policies that involve humans—especially people of alien cultures … But they have not prepared themselves for the serious and difficult task of translating their deep understanding into the workaday realities of decision making and the crossfire that goes with such a role" (Anthropology and Public Policy: A Dialogue, Walter Goldschmidt, ed., Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association, 1986, pp. 3-4). That contradiction suggests the challenge we face in making anthropology a significant policy discipline.


1998 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-43
Author(s):  
Margaret Everett

In James Peacock's 1995 address on the future of anthropology given at the AAA meetings in Washington, D.C., he spoke persuasively about the discipline's need to move "beyond the academy" and warned that in order for anthropology to flourish, "we must press outward" ("The Future of Anthropology," American Anthropologist 99(1): 9-29, 1997). Efforts to broaden anthropology's contribution to society "beyond the academy" are already under way, as Human Organization, this publication, and this column, in particular, attest. Specifically, renewed interest in public policy reflects the growing conviction that anthropologists' work today needs to be more relevant to decision-making. Applied anthropologists often express frustration at their lack of influence in decision-making processes. Again, as Peacock argues, "Applied anthropology is often a mop-up operation, identifying and solving problems caused by bad policy. Instead, anthropology must move to shaping policy." Efforts through the AAA, SfAA, and elsewhere suggest a turning point for applied anthropology and the discipline in general.


2016 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Sloan Wilson

AbstractThe target article is a major step toward integrating the biological and human-related sciences. It is highly relevant to economics and public policy formulation in the real world, in addition to its basic scientific import. My commentary covers a number of points, including avoiding an excessively narrow focus on agriculture, the importance of multilevel selection and complex systems theory, and utopic versus dystopic scenarios for the future.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-89
Author(s):  
Fionnula Flannery

The General Medical Council (GMC)'s guidance Confidentiality was last published in 2009. Since then the healthcare landscape in the four countries of the UK has continued to evolve and in 2015 the guidance will be reviewed to ensure that it remains compatible with the law and relevant to practice. This article summarises some of the practice issues that have been identified in enquiries to the GMC. These include the increasing emphasis on the use and integration of electronic health records systems to support patient care; the impacts of national policy debates around adult and child safeguarding; and ongoing debates about the use of health information for secondary purposes such as research, healthcare planning and audit. These issues raise questions and challenges, for example around models of consent, the definition and scope of public interest, and the relative weights that should be given to community needs and to individual autonomy that will need to be considered as part of the review of the guidance. 'All that may come to my knowledge in the exercise of my profession or in daily commerce with men, which ought not to be spread abroad, I will keep secret and will never reveal.' – Hippocrates, 5th century BC


2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. Reisman

Economics tends to concentrate on the market while politics is the study of governance and of leadership. The real world does not divide neatly along the lines that mark out the disciplines. The mixed economy, partly free enterprise and partly State management, is a case in point where trespass and synthesis are essential if an important real-world phenomenon is to be understood and, where appropriate, reshaped. This paper seeks to map out the mixed economy. It strives in that way to provide a framework for discourse that clarifies the choices open to public policy.


2000 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-48
Author(s):  
Rob Winthrop

The challenge of forging connections between anthropology and public policy is a lesson each generation must apparently relearn. The history of anthropology certainly offers good examples. But we also need to look to our contemporaries for models of successful practice. However impressive figures such as Franz Boas or Philleo Nash (Commissioner of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, among other posts) may be, they faced different challenges and employed different strategies to reach their goals. As we stagger across that bridge to the twenty-first century, efforts to utilize anthropology in the policy domain appear far more challenging—both ethically and practically—than they did fifty or eighty years ago.


2001 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 54-55
Author(s):  
Rob Winthrop

Anyone who has struggled through a few of these columns knows that I regularly mount my soapbox, preaching the gospel of public policy engagement to the unconverted followers of "pure" anthropology. But one of the difficulties in arguing for a greater anthropological presence in the policy arena is that our models and theories—not to mention our shape-shifting core concept, culture—are often poorly suited to interpreting the complexities of post-industrial societies reshaped by globalization.


2005 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 244-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
OLIVIER BLANCHARD

This interview was completed in May 2004, well before Stan Fischer had any idea he would become Governor of the Bank of Israel, a position he took up in May 2005. The interview took place in April 2004 in my office at the Russell Sage Foundation in New York City, where I was spending a sabbatical year. We completed it while running together in Central Park during the following weeks.Our meeting at Russell Sage was just like the many meetings we have had over the years. I was not sitting with a Master of the Universe, a world VIP, but with the same Stan Fischer I had first met in 1973 when he was a young associate professor, freshly imported from Chicago. There was the same ability to listen carefully, the same ability to talk and to explain simply and straightforwardly. In addition, there was the accumulated wisdom of a professional life spent developing and applying macroeconomics to the very real world.When I arrived as a PhD student at MIT in 1973, it was clear that Stan would quickly play a central role in the department. Within a few years, he was one of the most popular teachers, and one of the most popular thesis advisers. We flocked to his office, and I suspect that the only time for research he had was during the night. What we admired most were his technical skills (he knew how to use stochastic calculus)—, and his ability to take on big questions and to simplify them to the point where the answer, ex post, looked obvious. When Rudi Dornbusch joined him in 1975, macro and international quickly became the most exciting fields at MIT. Imitation is the sincerest form of admiration, and this is very much what we all did.When I came back to MIT in 1982, this time as a faculty member, Stan had acquired near-guru status. Teaching the advanced macro courses with him, and writing “Lectures on Macroeconomics,” which we finished in 1988, was one of the most exciting intellectual adventures of my life. We both felt that there was a new macroeconomics, more micro-founded and full of promises and that we understood its architecture and its usefulness. Although we had not thought of it as a textbook, it quickly became one, and it is nice to know that it still sells surprisingly well today.As the years had passed, Stan had taken more and more interest in applying theory to the real world, working with Rudi on hyperinflation, being involved in the economics of peace with George Shultz in the Middle East. In 1988, he decided to jump from academia to the real world, and became Chief Economist of the World Bank. After a brief return to MIT, he then returned to Washington in 1994 to become First Deputy Managing Director of the IMF, where he remained until 2001. That part of his life has been well documented in newspapers and magazines: While at the IMF, he was on the front lines during the Mexican crisis, the Russian crisis, the Asian crises, and many others. From the peeks I got of him during those times, what strikes me most is how he remained the same as he had been at MIT: calm, careful about the facts, analytical, using macroeconomic theory even in the middle of the most intense fires. Many thought and hoped that he would become the managing director of the IMF. Antiquated rules and country politics prevented it from happening. The IMF's loss turned out to be the private sector's gain. In 2002, Stan joined Citigroup, where he is the President of Citigroup International. He is still active in macro policy debates and remains one of the wise men of our profession.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia T. Papachristou

Economics is exciting because it can deal effectively with critical public policy issues. Unfortunately, this aspect of economics is usually left for more advanced courses. Consequently many students find principles of economics boring and not relevant to the real world. The use of public policy issues can foster greater student involvement in the learning process with a higher level of critical thinking skills.


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