Comparing the situations of anthropologists around the world as to publication and evaluation criteria

IF 2.6 1区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Anthropologist Pub Date : 2024-04-29 DOI:10.1111/aman.13981
Gordon Mathews, Gonzalo Díaz Crovetto, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, P.-j. Ezeh, Shannon Morreira, Yasmeen Arif, Chen Gang, Takami Kuwayama
{"title":"Comparing the situations of anthropologists around the world as to publication and evaluation criteria","authors":"Gordon Mathews,&nbsp;Gonzalo Díaz Crovetto,&nbsp;Thomas Hylland Eriksen,&nbsp;P.-j. Ezeh,&nbsp;Shannon Morreira,&nbsp;Yasmeen Arif,&nbsp;Chen Gang,&nbsp;Takami Kuwayama","doi":"10.1111/aman.13981","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>In January 2022, the World Council of Anthropological Associations Task Force “Making Anthropology Global” was formed, consisting of Gonzalo Díaz Crovetto, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, P.-j. Ezeh, Shannon Morreira, Yasmeen Arif, Chen Gang, Gordon Mathews (chairperson), and Takami Kuwayama, reporting on Chile, Norway, Nigeria, South Africa. India, China, Hong Kong, and Japan. The task force met via Zoom once a month during 2022 and early 2023, with assignments after each meeting, whereby members wrote about the situation of anthropologists in their own societies.</p><p>Initially, the task force focused on the impact of citation indexes such as the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) on promotion practices for anthropologists in our different societies. As Kuwayama (<span>2017</span>, 162−63) writes, “as of April 2017, a total of 82 journals are listed in SSCI under the category of anthropology. . . . Of these, the US accounts for 38, the UK 21, Germany 6, Australia 3, the Netherlands, 3, Chile, 2, France 2, Spain 2, Argentina 1, Italy 1, New Zealand 1, Slovenia 1, and Switzerland 1.” This situation is essentially unchanged in the years since, with Anglo-American hegemony an indisputable fact in anthropological journal publishing. However, as we proceeded in our work, we soon realized that SSCI was only one factor in how anthropologists were being evaluated, and so we began to examine the more general situations of anthropologists in our different societies. This brief report summarizes our findings in terms of publication expectations, citation indexes, language usage, and promotional criteria among anthropologists in the eight different societies we represent and also offers our recommendations. A significant limitation of this report is that it covers a small range of societies, albeit from a wide geographic range around the world, and we hope in the future to expand these to cover all the world, but we do sense that the diversity of the societies we represent offers at least the start of a global profile. We begin by providing a country-by-country report. We then provide a comparison of the different issues raised in these reports. Finally, we arrive at a few suggestions for how global problems in publication, language, promotion, and other issues might be alleviated.</p><p>In what follows, we present key points both from the preceding profiles of anthropological publishing and evaluation in different societies and from the longer document we produced as a task force.</p><p>The following are broad criteria that we have all come to agree upon within our task force. We are well aware that their adoption may be a pipe dream, but we offer them in the spirit of provoking discussion and perhaps expanding imaginations as to what might be possible.</p><p>(1) Some form of evaluation of anthropology professors seems inevitable. The earlier situations of Japan and China, where seniority was effectively the only grounds for promotion, is broadly untenable. However, evaluation that is inhumanly strict, as in Hong Kong, is also untenable. We suggest a middle ground. Once someone is hired for an anthropology position, they should be able to remain unless their performance is clearly substandard.</p><p>(2) Rating one's publications by the rankings of the journals in which one has published seems absurdly reductive, and yet it does offer a degree of objectivity and transparency that other forms of evaluation may lack—that is, a nonanthropologist might claim, uncomprehendingly, “I've read their publications and they're rubbish!” This is why the young Chinese anthropologists mentioned earlier prefer the current system of evaluation over those in the past. However, if there are ranked lists of journals used for evaluation, anthropologists themselves should be able to set the criteria by which these journals are ranked, or at the very least should have a strong say in setting these criteria, as is the case in Norway, but not in Chile.</p><p>(3) Evaluation should take place using not simply one criterion of publishing in certain specified professional journals. Rather, it should encompass other activities as well, such as contributing policy reports or writing for the larger public, both of which are important. This is already the case in China, in terms of writing policy reports, to a degree, but not elsewhere, such as Norway, and most other societies. Writing in languages other than English for a larger public should also be acceptable as both a vehicle for scholarship and popular writing.</p><p>(4) Anglo-American domination of citation indexes such as SSCI is deeply unfortunate and can be solved only by anthropologists in a range of societies citing from local, national, and regional sources, rather than from the Anglo-American “core.” However, at present, this situation is the reality. While publication in the Anglo-American core need not necessarily be discouraged, publication within other contexts—the regional, the national, and the local—should be equally encouraged in the anthropological worlds of different societies and should “count” in the evaluation of professors. The fact that Anglo-American journals dominate citation indexes is not a function of the quality of these journals but rather of the fact that the United States and United Kingdom have many anthropologists citing from journals in their own language. Because of the power and prestige of the United States and United Kingdom, many anthropologists in other societies do likewise, but more, they should be encouraged to cite from journals in their own societies and regions. This, of course, is easier said than done at present.</p><p>(5) There is a vast discrepancy in pay and benefits as well as in expected duties among anthropologists in different societies, including the societies represented in this task force. Because we have focused primarily on publication, we have not addressed this underlying fact, but it is obvious. Some members of our task force have an annual income 10 times higher than other members of the task force. This cannot be addressed within the narrow scope of our report, but it does, lamentably, color its entire background. It is also very clearly the case that adjuncts and precariously employed anthropologists form a vast proletariat underclass throughout the contemporary world of anthropology. This is the case in every one of the societies discussed in this report. Given economic realities, it is difficult to see how this can be overcome. We can only urge higher pay and benefits for adjuncts in all societies.</p><p>(6) The gap between the Global North and the Global South in anthropology is apparent not only in citation indexes but also in places where anthropologists do fieldwork and in how they are funded. Anthropologists from the Global North come to the Global South to do research, but the obverse rarely happens. The implication of the funding disparity is that funders in the Global North do not trust scholars—anthropologists—in the Global South. We hope that funders, and, more broadly, anthropologists in the Global North, can work to overcome this problem.</p><p>(7) World university rankings have become ubiquitous and place particular pressure on the Global South. Universities of the Global South, almost by definition, lack the resources of the Global North, and so to place all these universities on a single global scale is problematic. This is especially true of anthropology, since in many countries of the Global South it is under threat as an independent discipline. For example, how many students are willing to go from the Global North to the Global South to study anthropology (as opposed to doing research)? Very few. This can only be rectified in the long term, but it must be steadily worked toward.</p>","PeriodicalId":7697,"journal":{"name":"American Anthropologist","volume":"126 3","pages":"524-535"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2024-04-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/aman.13981","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Anthropologist","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/aman.13981","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In January 2022, the World Council of Anthropological Associations Task Force “Making Anthropology Global” was formed, consisting of Gonzalo Díaz Crovetto, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, P.-j. Ezeh, Shannon Morreira, Yasmeen Arif, Chen Gang, Gordon Mathews (chairperson), and Takami Kuwayama, reporting on Chile, Norway, Nigeria, South Africa. India, China, Hong Kong, and Japan. The task force met via Zoom once a month during 2022 and early 2023, with assignments after each meeting, whereby members wrote about the situation of anthropologists in their own societies.

Initially, the task force focused on the impact of citation indexes such as the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) on promotion practices for anthropologists in our different societies. As Kuwayama (2017, 162−63) writes, “as of April 2017, a total of 82 journals are listed in SSCI under the category of anthropology. . . . Of these, the US accounts for 38, the UK 21, Germany 6, Australia 3, the Netherlands, 3, Chile, 2, France 2, Spain 2, Argentina 1, Italy 1, New Zealand 1, Slovenia 1, and Switzerland 1.” This situation is essentially unchanged in the years since, with Anglo-American hegemony an indisputable fact in anthropological journal publishing. However, as we proceeded in our work, we soon realized that SSCI was only one factor in how anthropologists were being evaluated, and so we began to examine the more general situations of anthropologists in our different societies. This brief report summarizes our findings in terms of publication expectations, citation indexes, language usage, and promotional criteria among anthropologists in the eight different societies we represent and also offers our recommendations. A significant limitation of this report is that it covers a small range of societies, albeit from a wide geographic range around the world, and we hope in the future to expand these to cover all the world, but we do sense that the diversity of the societies we represent offers at least the start of a global profile. We begin by providing a country-by-country report. We then provide a comparison of the different issues raised in these reports. Finally, we arrive at a few suggestions for how global problems in publication, language, promotion, and other issues might be alleviated.

In what follows, we present key points both from the preceding profiles of anthropological publishing and evaluation in different societies and from the longer document we produced as a task force.

The following are broad criteria that we have all come to agree upon within our task force. We are well aware that their adoption may be a pipe dream, but we offer them in the spirit of provoking discussion and perhaps expanding imaginations as to what might be possible.

(1) Some form of evaluation of anthropology professors seems inevitable. The earlier situations of Japan and China, where seniority was effectively the only grounds for promotion, is broadly untenable. However, evaluation that is inhumanly strict, as in Hong Kong, is also untenable. We suggest a middle ground. Once someone is hired for an anthropology position, they should be able to remain unless their performance is clearly substandard.

(2) Rating one's publications by the rankings of the journals in which one has published seems absurdly reductive, and yet it does offer a degree of objectivity and transparency that other forms of evaluation may lack—that is, a nonanthropologist might claim, uncomprehendingly, “I've read their publications and they're rubbish!” This is why the young Chinese anthropologists mentioned earlier prefer the current system of evaluation over those in the past. However, if there are ranked lists of journals used for evaluation, anthropologists themselves should be able to set the criteria by which these journals are ranked, or at the very least should have a strong say in setting these criteria, as is the case in Norway, but not in Chile.

(3) Evaluation should take place using not simply one criterion of publishing in certain specified professional journals. Rather, it should encompass other activities as well, such as contributing policy reports or writing for the larger public, both of which are important. This is already the case in China, in terms of writing policy reports, to a degree, but not elsewhere, such as Norway, and most other societies. Writing in languages other than English for a larger public should also be acceptable as both a vehicle for scholarship and popular writing.

(4) Anglo-American domination of citation indexes such as SSCI is deeply unfortunate and can be solved only by anthropologists in a range of societies citing from local, national, and regional sources, rather than from the Anglo-American “core.” However, at present, this situation is the reality. While publication in the Anglo-American core need not necessarily be discouraged, publication within other contexts—the regional, the national, and the local—should be equally encouraged in the anthropological worlds of different societies and should “count” in the evaluation of professors. The fact that Anglo-American journals dominate citation indexes is not a function of the quality of these journals but rather of the fact that the United States and United Kingdom have many anthropologists citing from journals in their own language. Because of the power and prestige of the United States and United Kingdom, many anthropologists in other societies do likewise, but more, they should be encouraged to cite from journals in their own societies and regions. This, of course, is easier said than done at present.

(5) There is a vast discrepancy in pay and benefits as well as in expected duties among anthropologists in different societies, including the societies represented in this task force. Because we have focused primarily on publication, we have not addressed this underlying fact, but it is obvious. Some members of our task force have an annual income 10 times higher than other members of the task force. This cannot be addressed within the narrow scope of our report, but it does, lamentably, color its entire background. It is also very clearly the case that adjuncts and precariously employed anthropologists form a vast proletariat underclass throughout the contemporary world of anthropology. This is the case in every one of the societies discussed in this report. Given economic realities, it is difficult to see how this can be overcome. We can only urge higher pay and benefits for adjuncts in all societies.

(6) The gap between the Global North and the Global South in anthropology is apparent not only in citation indexes but also in places where anthropologists do fieldwork and in how they are funded. Anthropologists from the Global North come to the Global South to do research, but the obverse rarely happens. The implication of the funding disparity is that funders in the Global North do not trust scholars—anthropologists—in the Global South. We hope that funders, and, more broadly, anthropologists in the Global North, can work to overcome this problem.

(7) World university rankings have become ubiquitous and place particular pressure on the Global South. Universities of the Global South, almost by definition, lack the resources of the Global North, and so to place all these universities on a single global scale is problematic. This is especially true of anthropology, since in many countries of the Global South it is under threat as an independent discipline. For example, how many students are willing to go from the Global North to the Global South to study anthropology (as opposed to doing research)? Very few. This can only be rectified in the long term, but it must be steadily worked toward.

查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
比较世界各地人类学家在出版和评价标准方面的情况
虽然不一定要阻止在英美核心期刊上发表文章,但在不同社会的人类学世界中,同样应该鼓励在其他背景下--地区、国家和地方--发表文章,并应在教授评价中 "计入"。英美期刊在引文索引中占主导地位,这并不是因为这些期刊的质量如何,而是因为美国和英国有许多人类学家引用了他们自己语言的期刊。由于美国和英国的实力和声望,其他社会的许多人类学家也会这样做,但更应该鼓励他们引用自己社会和地区的期刊。当然,这在目前说起来容易做起来难(5)。不同社会的人类学家,包括本特别工作组所代表的社会的人类学家,在薪酬和福利以及预期职责方面存在巨大差异。由于我们主要关注的是出版问题,因此没有涉及这一基本事实,但这是显而易见的。我们工作组的一些成员的年收入是工作组其他成员的 10 倍。在我们报告的狭小范围内无法解决这个问题,但令人遗憾的是,这确实给报告的整个背景增添了色彩。同样非常明显的是,兼职人类学家和工作不稳定的人类学家在整个当代人类学界构成了一个庞大的无产阶级底层。本报告讨论的每一个社会都是这种情况。鉴于经济现实,我们很难看到如何克服这一问题。(6)全球北方和全球南方在人类学领域的差距不仅在引用指数上显而易见,在人类学家开展田野工作的地方以及他们获得资助的方式上也是如此。来自全球北方的人类学家来到全球南方进行研究,但相反的情况却很少发生。资助差异的含义是,全球北方的资助者不信任全球南方的学者--人类学家。我们希望资助者,更广泛地说,全球北方的人类学家,能够努力克服这一问题(7)。全球南方国家的大学几乎顾名思义缺乏全球北方国家的资源,因此把所有这些大学都放在一个单一的全球规模上是有问题的。人类学尤其如此,因为在全球南部的许多国家,人类学作为一门独立学科正受到威胁。例如,有多少学生愿意从全球北方到全球南方学习人类学(而不是做研究)?寥寥无几。这种情况只能从长计议,但必须朝着这个方向稳步前进。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 去求助
来源期刊
American Anthropologist
American Anthropologist ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
11.40%
发文量
114
期刊介绍: American Anthropologist is the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association, reaching well over 12,000 readers with each issue. The journal advances the Association mission through publishing articles that add to, integrate, synthesize, and interpret anthropological knowledge; commentaries and essays on issues of importance to the discipline; and reviews of books, films, sound recordings and exhibits.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Toward an anthropology that cares: Lessons from the Academic Carework project Parenting and the production of ethnographic knowledge Why I quit and why I stay Paul Edward Farmer (1959–2022)
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1