The researcher with his or her multiple identities, his or her background, and habits forms part of the experience in the field and therefore influences data generation. In this chapter, Ammann reflects on how her identity shaped her field research on the women-state nexus in a Muslim West African city. She analyses how she has dealt with gender-related difficulties and opportunities she came across during fieldwork, especially how she adapted her ethnographic approach because accessibility to women proved to be a major challenge. In the conclusion, Ammann argues that flexibility and adaptation are key for ethnographic research. She pleads for more contributions in which not only female but also male researchers reflect on how their gendere...
This article emanates from my reflections as an African feminist scholar, based on the dilemma that ...
This article contributes to the reflexive turn within the social sciences by arguing for enhanced re...
This paper is based on my experiences of the field work that I carried out during my doctoral studie...
Fieldwork can be an enjoyable academic adventure producing lifelong experiences of excitement and a...
This chapter takes a gendered perspective on some of the challenges and opportunities of interventio...
International audienceIn this chapter, the author draws on her experiences as a woman researcher in ...
This article explores some of the complexities of fieldwork for ethnographers conducting research in...
"This book examines how women in Guinea articulate themselves politically within and outside institu...
Fieldwork, and preparing for fieldwork, are paramount for language documentation. In the past years,...
Through an 'ethnography of ethnographers', this volume explores the varied ways in which anthropolog...
The paper aims to demonstrate that while researcher’s background could be a factor in gaining access...
The civil conflict in Liberia, in West Africa, caused significant social, infrastructural, and ecolo...
This paper shows the links between migrant transnationalism and the methodological debates concernin...
This article discusses a dimension of fieldwork methodology often overlooked. It concerns the act of...
This paper examines the model of ethnographic framing of the self/other relationship, and how this f...
This article emanates from my reflections as an African feminist scholar, based on the dilemma that ...
This article contributes to the reflexive turn within the social sciences by arguing for enhanced re...
This paper is based on my experiences of the field work that I carried out during my doctoral studie...
Fieldwork can be an enjoyable academic adventure producing lifelong experiences of excitement and a...
This chapter takes a gendered perspective on some of the challenges and opportunities of interventio...
International audienceIn this chapter, the author draws on her experiences as a woman researcher in ...
This article explores some of the complexities of fieldwork for ethnographers conducting research in...
"This book examines how women in Guinea articulate themselves politically within and outside institu...
Fieldwork, and preparing for fieldwork, are paramount for language documentation. In the past years,...
Through an 'ethnography of ethnographers', this volume explores the varied ways in which anthropolog...
The paper aims to demonstrate that while researcher’s background could be a factor in gaining access...
The civil conflict in Liberia, in West Africa, caused significant social, infrastructural, and ecolo...
This paper shows the links between migrant transnationalism and the methodological debates concernin...
This article discusses a dimension of fieldwork methodology often overlooked. It concerns the act of...
This paper examines the model of ethnographic framing of the self/other relationship, and how this f...
This article emanates from my reflections as an African feminist scholar, based on the dilemma that ...
This article contributes to the reflexive turn within the social sciences by arguing for enhanced re...
This paper is based on my experiences of the field work that I carried out during my doctoral studie...