Dieter Haller is Associate Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Germanic Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. His fo cus is on political anthropology, borderland studies, gender, and the Mediterranean. Cris Shore is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Auckland. He is author of Building Europe: The Cultural Politics of European Integration (Routledge) and co-editor of Anthropology and Cultural Studies (Pluto Press).
CONTRIBUTORS
Dorle Dracklé is Professor of Social Anthropology and Intercultural
Studies at the University of Bremen, Germany. Her current fi eldwork
in Portugal focuses on elites, corruption, economy and the European
Union. She is also interested in media, science and technology
studies, economy, politics and policy, and the teaching and learning
of anthropology. Recent publications include: The Rhetorics of Crisis:
On the Cultural Poetics of Politics, Bureaucracy and Virtual Economy in
Southern Portugal (in German, 2004), Current Policies and Practices in
European Social Anthropology Education (ed. with Iain Edgar, 2004),
Educational Histories of European Social Anthropology (ed. with Iain
Edgar and Thomas Schippers, 2003), Images of Death (in German, ed.,
2001); and various articles, among others on media anthropology,
multicultural media, life course, and suicide.
Akhil Gupta is associate professor of anthropology at Stanford
University, California. His research interests are currently focused on
a project on the ethnography of the state in India and environmental
history. He is the author of Postcolonial Developments: Agriculture in the
Making of Modern India (1998) and co-editor of several books including
Caste and Outcast (with Gordon Chang and Purnima Mankekar, 2002),
Anthropological Locations: Boundaries and Grounds of a Field Science
(1997) and Culture, Power, Place: Explorations in Critical Anthropology
(1997) (both with James Ferguson).
Dieter Haller (PhD 1991 Heidelberg, Habil. 1999 Frankfurt/Oder),
cultural and social anthropologist, is Adjunct Associate Professor
at the Department of Germanic Studies at the University of Texas/
Austin. He has worked as Guest Professor in Frankfurt/Main (2000),
Hamburg (2001), Granada (2002) and as Theodor-Heuss Lecturer at
New School University/New York (2003). His main fields of interest
are port cities, borderlands, diaspora, ethnicity, Gibraltar, Spain
and the Mediterranean. His latest publications are a monograph
on Gibraltar (Gelebte Grenze Gibraltar, Wiesbaden: Deutscher
Universitätsverlag, 2000), a special issue of Ethnologia Europaea on
‘Border Anthropology’ (co-edited with Hastings Donnan, 2000), an
introduction to cultural anthropology (DTV-Atlas zur Ethnologie,
München, forthcoming 2004/05)
Sian Lazar is currently Research Offi cer at the Centre for Latin
American Studies, University of Cambridge. She completed her
PhD at Goldsmiths College, London University, with a thesis on
citizenship, personhood and political agency among rural–urban
migrants in El Alto, Bolivia. She is co-author, with Maxine Molyneux,
of Doing the Rights Thing: Rights-based Development and Latin American
NGOs (ITDG Publishing, London, 2003).
David W. Lovell is an Associate Professor in Politics and currently
Acting Rector of the University of New South Wales at the Australian
Defence Force Academy. During the early 1990s, he edited the Political
Theory Newsletter, and was managing editor of the Australian Journal of
Political Science. In 1992, he was the Australian Parliamentary Political
Science Fellow, and since 1993 he has been a member of the Executive
Committee of the International Society for the Study of European
Ideas, and is on the editorial board of its journal, The European Legacy.
In 2001, he was part of the Australian government’s delegation to
The Hague for the Second Global Forum on Fighting Corruption and
Safeguarding Integrity. His books include From Marx to Lenin (1984);
Marx’s Proletariat (1988); The Theory of Politics (co-authored, 1991);
The Transition from Socialism (co-edited, 1992); Marxism and Australian
Socialism (1997); The Australian Political System (co-authored, 1998);
The Transition: Evaluating the Postcommunist Experience (ed., 2002);
and Asia-Pacifi c Security: Policy Challenges (ed., 2003).
Carol MacLennan is an anthropologist at Michigan Tech University.
Previously she worked in the US Department of Transportation on
automotive regulation. She has published articles on government
regulation, corporate infl uence in democratic decision-making, and
industrial communities, and is a co-author of The State and Democracy:
Revitalizing America’s Government (with Mark Levine, Charles Noble
and John Kushma, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1988). She is currently
completing writing projects on the history of corporate control over
the landscapes of sugar and mining communities.
Michele Rivkin-Fish is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the
University of Kentucky. Her work examines gender, health and
health care, reproductive politics, and international development
in Russia. Her research has been published in the journals American
Anthropologist, Social Science and Medicine, and Culture, Medicine, and
Psychiatry.
Steven Sampson is a social anthropologist at the University of Lund,
with research and consulting experience in Romania, Albania, Bosnia
and Kosovo. His work focuses on the role of NGOs and civil society,
on ‘project life’ in developmental contexts, and on democracy export. His current project concerns the anti-corruption movement
in the Balkans.
Jane Schneider teaches anthropology at the City University of New
York Graduate Center. She is the co-editor, with Annette B. Weiner,
of Cloth and Human Experience (1987), and the author of several
essays on cloth and clothing. Her anthropological fi eld research has
been in Sicily and has led to three books, co-authored with Peter
Schneider: Culture and Political Economy in Western Sicily (1976);
Festival of the Poor: Fertility Decline and the Ideology of Class in Sicily
(1996); and Reversible Destiny: Mafi a, Antimafi a and the Struggle for
Palermo (forthcoming). In 1998, she edited Italy’s Southern Question;
Orientalism in One Country.
Peter Schneider teaches sociology at Fordham University. He is coauthor,
with Jane Schneider, of Culture and Political Economy in Western
Sicily (1976); Festival of the Poor: Fertility Decline and the Ideology of Class
in Sicily (1996); and Reversible Destiny: Mafi a, Antimafi a and the Struggle
for Palermo (forthcoming). He is pursuing his interests in organized
crime and criminalization through research on Youngstown, Ohio,
and as a founding member of a new section on these issues at the
New York Academy of Sciences.
Cris Shore is professor of anthropology at the University of Auckland,
New Zealand. He is co-editor, with Stephen Nugent, of Anthropology
of Elites (2002) and Anthropology and Cultural Studies (1997), with
Susan Wright, of Anthropology of Policy (1997) and with Akbar Ahmed
of The Future of Anthropology (1995). His work focuses on issues in
political anthropology, policy and governance. He has carried out
anthropological fi eldwork in Italy, from which he wrote Italian
Communism: The Escape from Lenin (1990), and more recently among
EU civil servants in Brussels, which led to the book Building Europe:
The Cultural Politics of European Integration (2000). His current interest
is in the politics of accountability and the rise of ‘audit culture’.
Filippo M. Zerilli is currently researcher and lecturer at the
University of Cagliari where he teaches cultural anthropology. He
also teaches ethnographic research methods at the University of
Perugia. Since 1996 he has been conducting extensive fi eldwork
in Romania exploring privatization and property issues. His main
research interests include the history of anthropology, postsocialism,
ethnography of law and human rights, changing property relations,
the emotional and moral dimension of ownership claims. Among his
publications are: Il lato oscuro dell’etnologia (CISU: Rome, 1998), and
the edited collection Dalle ‘Regole’ al ‘Suicidio’: Percorsi durkheimiani
(Argo: Lecce, 2001). He is the co-editor of Incontri di etnologia europea.
European Ethnology Meetings (Edizioni Scientifi che Italiane: Naples, 1998), and of La ricerca antropologica in Romania: Prospettive storiche
ed etnografi che (Edizioni Scientifi che Italiane: Naples, 2003). He is
presently preparing a book focusing on the property restitution
debates in postsocialist Romania.
Dorothy Louise Zinn (PhD in Social-Cultural Anthropology at the
University of Texas at Austin) is an independent scholar and adjunct
instructor at the Università degli Studi della Basilicata. Her areas
of interest include political economy, patronage, immigration and
multiculturalism. Along with numerous academic articles, she has
published the volume La Raccomandazione (Rome: Donzelli, 2001),
which was awarded the Pitré Prize for anthropological works. Dr
Zinn’s other professional activities include anthropological translation
and collaboration with the award-winning Associazione Tolbà
(<www.associazionetolba.org>) to assist immigrants and promote
intercultural dialogue.
Corruption in politics and business is, after war, perhaps the greatest threat to democracy. Academic studies of corruption tend to come from the field of International Relations, analysing systems of formal rules and institutions. This book offers a radically different perspective -- it shows how anthropology can throw light on aspects of corruption that remain unexamined in international relations. The contributors reveal how corruption operates through informal rules, personal connections and the wider social contexts that govern everyday practices. They argue that patterns of corruption are part of the fabric of everyday life -- wherever we live -- and subsequently they are often endemic in our key institutions. The book examines corruption across a range of different contexts from transitional societies such as post-Soviet Russia and Romania, to efforts to reform or regulate institutions that are perceived to be potentially corrupt, such as the European Commission. The book also covers the Enron and WorldCom scandals, the mafia in Sicily and the USA, and the world of anti-corruption as represented by NGOs like Transparency International.
發表於2024-12-23
Corruption 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
一本關於全世界各個國傢,部門,NGO,跨國公司等腐敗行為的民族誌。作者們來自各個專業,行文風格不一,有憤青型,有故事流,看來看去特彆像凱迪貓眼的帖子。但是前言部分提齣的問題s很有意思,關於對腐敗現象進行人類學研究的一些疑問, 1,如何去measure corruption呢?按照...
評分一本關於全世界各個國傢,部門,NGO,跨國公司等腐敗行為的民族誌。作者們來自各個專業,行文風格不一,有憤青型,有故事流,看來看去特彆像凱迪貓眼的帖子。但是前言部分提齣的問題s很有意思,關於對腐敗現象進行人類學研究的一些疑問, 1,如何去measure corruption呢?按照...
評分一本關於全世界各個國傢,部門,NGO,跨國公司等腐敗行為的民族誌。作者們來自各個專業,行文風格不一,有憤青型,有故事流,看來看去特彆像凱迪貓眼的帖子。但是前言部分提齣的問題s很有意思,關於對腐敗現象進行人類學研究的一些疑問, 1,如何去measure corruption呢?按照...
評分一本關於全世界各個國傢,部門,NGO,跨國公司等腐敗行為的民族誌。作者們來自各個專業,行文風格不一,有憤青型,有故事流,看來看去特彆像凱迪貓眼的帖子。但是前言部分提齣的問題s很有意思,關於對腐敗現象進行人類學研究的一些疑問, 1,如何去measure corruption呢?按照...
評分一本關於全世界各個國傢,部門,NGO,跨國公司等腐敗行為的民族誌。作者們來自各個專業,行文風格不一,有憤青型,有故事流,看來看去特彆像凱迪貓眼的帖子。但是前言部分提齣的問題s很有意思,關於對腐敗現象進行人類學研究的一些疑問, 1,如何去measure corruption呢?按照...
圖書標籤: goverance Anthropology 社會學/人類學 politics ethnography corruption anthropology, anthropology
研究腐敗都要想著去送禮體驗一番 坑太多瞭太多瞭
評分前言提齣關於方法論的問題們很有意思。。。章節走故事流~某人提到的international community,這本書裏多得很吖~
評分研究腐敗都要想著去送禮體驗一番 坑太多瞭太多瞭
評分前言提齣關於方法論的問題們很有意思。。。章節走故事流~某人提到的international community,這本書裏多得很吖~
評分研究腐敗都要想著去送禮體驗一番 坑太多瞭太多瞭
Corruption 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載