Читать книгу A Companion to Medical Anthropology - Группа авторов - Страница 74

REFERENCES CITED

Оглавление

1 Arya, D. and Henn, M. (2021). COVID-Ized ethnography: Challenges and opportunities for young environmental activists and researchers. Societies 11 (2): 58.

2 Baer, R.D., Weller, S.C., De Alba Garcia, J.G., Glazer, M., Trotter, R., Pachter, L., and Klein, R.E. (2003). A cross-cultural approach to the study of the folk illness nervios. Culture, Medicine & Psychiatry 27 (3): 315–337.

3 Barrett, R. (2008). Aghor Medicine. Berkeley: University of California Press.

4 Beliso-De Jesús, A.M. and Pierre, J. (2020). Introduction to special section: Anthropology of white supremacy. American Anthropologist 122 (1): 65–75.

5 Bernard, H.R. (1996). Qualitative data, quantitative analysis. Cultural Anthropology Methods Journal 8 (1): 9–11.

6 Bernard, H.R. (2018). Research Methods in Anthropology, 6e. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

7 Bernard, H.R., Killworth, P., Kronenfeld, D., and Sailer, L. (1984). The problem of informant accuracy: The validity of retrospective data. Annual Review of Anthropology 13: 495–517.

8 Bernard, H.R., Wutich, A., and Ryan, G.W. (2017). Analyzing Qualitative Data: Systematic Approaches, 2e. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

9 Blakey, M.L. (2020). Archaeology under the blinding light of race. Current Anthropology 61 (S22): S183–97.

10 Bonilla, Y. and Rosa, J. (2015). #Ferguson: Digital protest, hashtag ethnography, and the racial politics of social media in the United States. American Ethnologist 42 (1): 4–17.

11 Borgatti, S.P., Everett, M.G., and Johnson, J.C. (2018). Analyzing Social Networks. Los Angeles: Sage Publications.

12 Borgerhoff Mulder, M. and Caro, T.M. (1985). The use of quantitative observational techniques in anthropology. Current Anthropology 26 (3): 323–335.

13 Braun, V. and Clarke, V. (2021). To saturate or not to saturate? Questioning data saturation as a useful concept for thematic analysis and sample-size rationales. Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health 13 (2): 201–216.

14 Brewis, A., Wutich, A., Galvin, M., and Lachaud, J. (May 2020). Localizing syndemics: A comparative study of hunger, stigma, suffering, and crime exposure in three haitian communities. Social Science & Medicine 113031.

15 Brewis, A., Piperata, B., Dengah, H.J.F., Dressler, W.W., II, Liebert, M., Mattison, S., Negrón, R., Nelson, R., Oths, K., Snodgrass, J., Tanner, S., Thayer, Z., Wander, K., and Gravlee, C.C. (2022). Biocultural strategies for stress measurement in field-based research. Field Methods 33 (4): 315–334.

16 Brim, J.A. and Spain, D.H. (1974). Research Design in Anthropology: Paradigms and Pragmatics in the Testing of Hypotheses. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

17 Briggs, Charles L. (2020). Beyond the Linguistic/Medical Anthropology Divide: Retooling Anthropology to Face COVID-19. Medical Anthropology 39 (7): 563–72.

18 Brondizio, E.S. and Van Holt, T. (2015). Geospatial Analysis. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, 2e (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.C. Gravlee), 601–630. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

19 Carey, J.W. and Gelaude, D. (2008). Systematic methods for collecting and analyzing multidisciplinary team-based qualitative data. In: Handbook for Team-Based Qualitative Research. New York: AltaMira Press.

20 Cascio, M.A. (2017). Operationalizing new biopolitical theory for anthropological inquiry. Anthropological Quarterly 90 (1): 193–224.

21 Chambers, T. (2020). From fieldsite to “fieldsite”: Ethnographic methods in the time of COVID. Studies in Indian Politics 8 (2): 290–293.

22 Charmaz, K. (2014). Constructing Grounded Theory: A Practical Guide Through Qualitative Analysis, 2e. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

23 Chavez, L.R., Hubbell, F.A., McMullin, J.M., Martinez, R.G., and Mishra, S.I. (1995). Structure and meaning in models of breast and cervical cancer risk factors: A comparison of perceptions among latinas, anglo women, and physicians. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 9 (1): 40–47.

24 Chavez, L.R., McMullin, J.M., Mishra, S.I., and Hubbell, F.A. (2001). Beliefs matter: Cultural beliefs and the use of cervical cancer-screening tests. American Anthropologist 103 (4): 1114–1129.

25 Cohen, J. (1992). A power primer. Psychological Bulletin 112 (1): 155–159.

26 Creswell, J.W. (2007). Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design: Choosing among Five Approaches, 2e. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.

27 Dengah, H.J.F., Snodgrass, J.G., Polzer, E.R., and Nixon, W.C. (2021). Systematic Methods for Analyzing Culture: A Practical Guide. New York: Routledge.

28 DeWalt, K.M. and DeWalt, B.R. (2011). Participant Observation: A Guide for Fieldworkers, 2e. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

29 Doerfel, M.L. (1998). What constitutes semantic network analysis? A comparison of research and methdologies. Connections 21 (2): 16–26.

30 Dressler, W.W. (1995). Modeling biocultural interactions: examples from studies of stress and cardiovascular disease. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 38: 27–56.

31 Dressler, W.W. (2005). What’s cultural about biocultural research? Ethos 33 (1): 20–45.

32 Dressler, W.W. (2016). The 5 Things You Need to Know about Statistics: Quantification in Ethnographic Research. New York: Routledge.

33 Dressler, W.W. (2018). Culture and the Individual: Theory and Method of Cultural Consonance. New York: Routledge.

34 Dressler, W.W. (2020). Cultural consensus and cultural consonance: advancing a cognitive theory of culture. Field Methods 32 (4): 383–398.

35 Dressler, W.W., Borges, C.D., Balieiro, M.C., and Dos Santos, J.E. (2005). Measuring cultural consonance: examples with special reference to measurement theory in anthropology. Field Methods 17 (4): 331–355.

36 Dressler, W.W., Balieiro, M.C., and Dos Santos, J.E. (2015). Finding culture change in the second factor stability and change in cultural consensus and residual agreement. Field Methods 27 (1): 22–38.

37 El Guindi, F. (2004). Visual Anthropology: Essential Method and Theory. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press.

38 Farnell, B. and Graham, L.A. (2015). Discourse-centered methods. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, 2e (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.C. Gravlee). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

39 Francis, J.J., Johnston, M., Robertson, C., Glidewell, L., Entwistle, V., Eccles, M.P., and Grimshaw, J.M. (2010). What is an adequate sample size? Operationalising data saturation for theory-based interview studies. Psychology & Health 25 (10): 1229–1245.

40 Galvin, R. (2015). How many interviews are enough? Do qualitative interviews in building energy consumption research produce reliable knowledge? Journal of Building Engineering 1: 2–12.

41 Godoy, Ricardo, Victoria Reyes-García, Clarence C. Gravlee, Tomás Huanca, William R. Leonard, Thomas W. McDade, Susan Tanner, and TAPS Bolivia Study Team. (2009). Moving beyond a Snapshot to Understand Changes in the Well‐being of Native Amazonians. Current Anthropology 50 (4): 563–73.

42 Góralska, M. (2020). Anthropology from home. Anthropology in Action 27 (1): 46–52.

43 Gorden, R.L. (1992). Basic Interviewing Skills. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press.

44 Gravlee, C.C. (2005). Ethnic classification in southeastern puerto rico: The cultural model of “color”. Social Forces 83 (3): 949–970.

45 Gravlee, C.C., Dressler, W.W., and Bernard, H.R. (2005). Skin color, social classification, and blood pressure in Southeastern Puerto Rico. American Journal of Public Health 95 (12): 2191–2197.

46 Gravlee, C.C., Kennedy, D.P., Godoy, R., and Leonard, W.R. (2009). Methods for collecting panel data: What can cultural anthropology learn from other disciplines? Journal of Anthropological Research 65: 453–483.

47 Gravlee, C.C., Maxwell, C.R., Jacobsohn, A., and Bernard, H.R. (2018). Mode effects in cultural domain analysis: Comparing pile sort data collected via internet versus face-to-face interviews. International Journal of Social Research Methodology 21 (2): 165–176.

48 Gross, D.R. (1984). Time allocation: A tool for the study of cultural behavior. Annual Review of Anthropology 13 (1): 519–558.

49 Gross, J. (2020). Reflections on ethnographic fieldwork across a lifetime. Ethnography. 146613812098335.

50 Guest, G. (2015). Sampling and selecting participants in field research. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, 2e (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.C. Gravlee), 215–250. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

51 Guest, G., Bunce, A., and Johnson, L. (2006). How many interviews are enough?: An experiment with data saturation and variability. Field Methods 18 (1): 59–82.

52 Guest, G., Namey, E., and McKenna, K. (2017). How many focus groups are enough? Building an evidence base for nonprobability sample sizes. Field Methods 29 (1): 3–22.

53 Guest, G., Namey, E., and Chen, M. (2020). A simple method to assess and report thematic saturation in qualitative research. PloS One 15 (5): e0232076.

54 Hagaman, A.K. and Wutich, A. (2016). How many interviews are enough to identify metathemes in multisited and cross-cultural research? Another perspective on guest, bunce, and johnson’s (2006) Landmark Study. Field Methods 29 (1): 23–41.

55 Hames, R. and Paolisso, M. (2015). Behavioral Observation. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, 2e (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.C. Gravlee), 293–312. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

56 Handwerker, W.P. and Wozniak, D.F. (1997). Sampling strategies for the collection of cultural data: An extension of boas’s answer to galton’s problem. Current Anthropology 38 (5): 869–875.

57 Harrison, F.V. (ed) (2010). Decolonizing Anthropology: Moving Further toward an Anthropology for Liberation. Arlington, VA: American Anthropological Association.

58 Hennink, M.M., Kaiser, B.N., and Marconi, V.C. (2017). Code saturation versus meaning saturation: How many interviews are enough? Qualitative Health Research 27 (4): 591–608.

59 Hennink, M.M., Kaiser, B.N., and Weber, M.B. (2019). What influences saturation? Estimating sample sizes in focus group research. Qualitative Health Research 29 (10): 1483–1496.

60 Holmes, S. (2013). Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States. Berkeley: University of California Press.

61 Hruschka, D.J., Sibley, L.M., Kalim, N., and Edmonds, J.K. (2008). When there is more than one answer key: Cultural theories of postpartum hemorrhage in Matlab, Bangladesh. Field Methods 20 (4): 315.

62 Johnson, J.C. (1990). Selecting Ethnographic Informants. Newbury Park, Calif.: Sage Publications.

63 Johnson, J.C. (1998). Research design and research strategies. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.A. Walnut Creek). AltaMira.

64 Keohane, R.O., King, G., and Verba, S. (2021). Designing Social Inquiry: Scientific Inference in Qualitative Research. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

65 Krippendorff, K. (2018). Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology, 4e. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

66 LeCompte, M.D. and Schensul, J.J. (2010). Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research. Vol. 1. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

67 Leese, J., Li, L.C., Nimmon, L., Townsend, A.F., and Backman, C.L. (2021). Moving beyond “until saturation was reached”: Critically examining how saturation is used and reported in qualitative research. Arthritis Care & Research no 73 (9). acr.24600 (March).

68 Li, R., Scanlon, K.S., and Serdula, M.K. (2005). The validity and reliability of maternal recall of breastfeeding practice. Nutrition Reviews 63 (4): 103–110.

69 Marcus, G.E. (1995). Ethnography in/of the world system: The emergence of multi-sited ethnography. Annual Review of Anthropology 24: 95–117.

70 Mendenhall, E. and Singer, M. (2020). What constitutes a syndemic? Methods, contexts, and framing from 2019. Current Opinion in HIV and AIDS 15 (4): 213–217.

71 Miles, M.B. and Huberman, A.M. (1994). Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded Sourcebook, 2e. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

72 Miller, E.M., Aiello, M.O., Fujita, M., Hinde, K., Milligan, L., and Quinn, E.A. (2012). Field and laboratory methods in human milk research. American Journal of Human Biology 25 (1): 1–11.

73 Morgan, D.L. and Krueger, R.A. (1998). The Focus Group Kit. Vols 1–6. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

74 Morse, J.M. (1994). Designing qualitative research. In: Handbook of Qualitative Inquiry (ed. N.K. Denzin and Y.S. Lincoln). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

75 Onwuegbuzie, A.J. and Leech, N.L. (2005). Taking the “Q” out of research: teaching research methodology courses without the divide between quantitative and qualitative paradigms. Quality and Quantity 39 (3): 267–295.

76 Onwuegbuzie, A.J. and Leech, N.L. (2007). A call for qualitative power analyses. Quality and Quantity 41 (1): 105–121.

77 Pelto, P.J. and Pelto, G.H. (1996). Research designs in medical anthropology. In: Medical Anthropology: Contemporary Theory and Method (ed. C.F. Sargent and T.M. Johnson). Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.

78 Pigg, S.L. (2013). On sitting and doing: ethnography as action in global health. Social Science & Medicine 99: 127–134.

79 Podjed, D. (2021). Renewal of ethnography in the time of the COVID-19 crisis. Sociologija I Prostor 59 (219): 267–284.

80 Powis, R. 2017. How I write interview instruments. Anthrodendum. https://anthrodendum.org/2017/12/11/how-i-write-interview-instruments-ror2018 (accessed 11 December 2017).

81 Powis, R. 2020. Relations of Reproduction: Men, Masculinities, and Pregnancy in Dakar, Senegal. Ph.D. diss. Washington University in St. Louis.

82 Quinlan, J., Pearson, L.N., Clukay, C.J., Mitchell, M.M., Boston, Q., Gravlee, C.C., and Mulligan, C.J. (2016). Genetic loci and novel discrimination measures associated with blood pressure variation in african americans living in Tallahassee. PloS One 11 (12): e0167700.

83 Reese, A.M. (2019). Black Food Geographies: Race, Self-Reliance, and Food Access in Washington, D.C. Chapel Hill: UNC Press Books.

84 Romney, A.K., Weller, S.C., and Batchelder, W.H. (1986). Culture as consensus: A theory of culture and informant accuracy. American Anthropologist 88: 313–339.

85 Rubel, A.J., O’Nell, C.W., and Collado-Ardón, R. (1984). Susto, a Folk Illness. Berkeley: University of California Press.

86 Ruth, A., Wutich, A., and Brewis, A. (2019). A model for scaling undergraduate research experiences: The global ethnohydrology study. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters 37 (1): 25–34.

87 Ryan, G.W., Nolan, J.M., and Yoder, P.S. (2000). Successive free listing: using multiple free lists to generate explanatory models. Field Methods 12 (2): 83–107.

88 Sangaramoorthy, T. and Kroeger, K.A. (2020). Rapid Ethnographic Assessments: A Practical Approach and Toolkit for Collaborative Community Research. New York: Routledge.

89 Schensul, J.J. and LeCompte, M.D. (2013). Essential Ethnographic Methods: A Mixed Methods Approach. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

90 Schensul, S.L., Schensul, J.J., Singer, M., Weeks, M., and Brault, M. (2015). Participatory methods and community-based collaborations. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, Second (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.C. Gravlee), 185–212. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

91 Schoenberg, N.E., Drew, E.M., Stoller, E.P., and Kart, C.S. (2005). Situating stress: Lessons from lay discourses on diabetes. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 19 (2): 171–193.

92 Sebele-Mpofu, F.Y. (2020). Saturation controversy in qualitative research: Complexities and underlying assumptions. A literature review. Cogent Social Sciences 6 (1): 1838706.

93 Shain, R.N., Piper, J.M., Newton, E.R., Perdue, S.T., Ramos, E., Champion, J.D., and Guerra, F.A. (1999). A randomized, controlled trial of a behavioral intervention to prevent sexually transmitted disease among minority women. New England Journal of Medicine 340 (2): 93–100.

94 Sibley, L., Blum, L., Kalim, N., Hruschka, D.J., Edmonds, J., and Koblinsky, M. (2007). Women’s descriptions of postpartum health problems: Preliminary findings from Matlab, Bangladesh. Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health 52 (4): 351–360.

95 Singer, M.C., Erickson, P.I., Badiane, L., Diaz, R., Ortiz, D., Abraham, T., and Nicolaysen, A.M. (2006). Syndemics, sex and the city: Understanding sexually transmitted diseases in social and cultural context. Social Science & Medicine 63 (8): 2010–2021.

96 Smalls, K.A., Spears, A.K., and Rosa, J. (2021). Introduction: Language and white supremacy. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 31 (2): 152–156.

97 Smith, C.A. and Garrett‐Scott, D. (2021). “We are not named”: Black women and the politics of citation in anthropology. Feminist Anthropology 2 (1): 18–37.

98 Smith-Morris, C., Lopez, G., Ottomanelli, L., Goetz, L., and Dixon-Lawson, K. (2014). Ethnography, fidelity, and the evidence that anthropology adds: Supplementing the fidelity process in a clinical trial of supported employment. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 28 (2): 141–161.

99 Snodgrass, J.G. (2015). Ethnography of online cultures. In: Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology (ed. H.R. Bernard and C.C. Gravlee), 465–496. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

100 Sobo, E.J. (2009). Culture and Meaning in Health Services Research: A Practical Guide. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.

101 Spradley, J.P. (1979). The Ethnographic Interview. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.

102 Spradley, J.P. (1980). Participant Observation. New York: Holt: Rinehart & Winston.

103 Steinberg, S.J. and Steinberg, S.L. (2006). Geographic Information Systems for the Social Sciences: Investigating Space and Place. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.

104 Strong, A.E. (2020). Documenting Death: Maternal Mortality and the Ethics of Care in Tanzania. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.

105 Teddlie, C. and Tashakkori, A. (2009). Foundations of Mixed Methods Research: Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

106 Tomori, C., McFall, A.M., Solomon, S.S., Srikrishnan, A.K., Anand, S., Balakrishnan, P., Mehta, S.H., and Celentano, D.D. (2018). Is there synergy in syndemics? Psychosocial conditions and sexual risk among men who have sex with men in India. Social Science & Medicine 206: 110–116.

107 True, W.R. (1996). Epidemiology and medical anthropology. In: Medical Anthropology: Contemporary Theory and Method (ed. C.F. Sargent and T.M. Johnson). Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.

108 Tuhiwai Smith, L. (2021). Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples, 3e. New York: Bloomsbury.

109 Vitzthum, V.J. (1994). Suckling patterns: Lack of concordance between maternal recall and observational data. American Journal of Human Biology 6 (5): 551–562.

110 Wang, C. and Burris, M.A. (1997). Photovoice: Concept, methodology, and use for participatory needs assessment. Health Education & Behavior 24 (3): 369–387.

111 Weller, Susan C. 2015. “Structured Interviewing and Questionnaire Construction.” In Handbook of Methods in Cultural Anthropology, edited by H. Russell Bernard and Clarence C. Gravlee, Second, 343–90. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield

112 Weller, S.C. (2007). Cultural consensus theory: Applications and frequently asked questions. Field Methods 19: 339–368.

113 Weller, S.C. and Romney, A.K. (1988). Systematic Data Collection (Edited by M.L. Miller, J. Van Maanen, P.K. Manning, and C.A. Newbury Park). Sage.

114 Weller, S.C. and Romney, A.K. (1990). Metric Scaling: Correspondence Analysis. Newbury Park: Sage Publications.

115 Weller, S.C., Vickers, B., Bernard, H.R., Blackburn, A.M., Borgatti, S., Gravlee, C.C., and Johnson, J.C. (2018). Open-ended interview questions and saturation. PloS One 13 (6): e0198606.

116 Wutich, A. (2009). Water scarcity and the sustainability of a common pool resource institution in the Urban Andes. Human Ecology 37 (2): 179–192.

117 Wutich, A., Budds, J., Eichelberger, L., Geere, J., Harris, L., Horney, J., Jepson, W. et al. (2017). Advancing methods for research on household water insecurity: studying entitlements and capabilities, socio-cultural dynamics, and political processes, institutions and governance. Water Security 2: 1–10.

118 Wutich, A. and Brewis, A. (2019). Data collection in cross-cultural ethnographic research. Field Methods 31 (2): 181–189.

119 Wutich, A., Lant, T., White, D.D., Larson, K.L., and Gartin, M. (2010). Comparing focus group and individual responses on sensitive topics: A study of water decision makers in a desert city. Field Methods 22 (1): 88–110.

120 Yoder, P.S. (1995). Examining ethnomedical diagnoses and treatment choices for diarrheal disorders in Lubumbashi Swahili. Medical Anthropology 16 (3): 211–247.

121 Zuberi, T. and Bonilla-Silva, E. (eds) (2008). White Logic, White Methods: Race and Social Science. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

A Companion to Medical Anthropology

Подняться наверх