What is Anthropology?
What shapes our decision-making? Why do we think one way and act another? How can we empower the most vulnerable members of our society?
From COVID 19 to climate change, from homelessness to heritage, anthropology and anthropologists tackle society’s most significant issues. ASWA supports anthropologists from all over the world who work in Western Australia, and Western Australian-based anthropologists who work all over the world.
Anthropology can be defined as the study of human cultures and social systems. Most Anthropologists in Australia practice social or cultural anthropology; however, there are many sub-disciplines. Biological and Forensic Anthropology, which focus more closely on human anatomy and physiology, are separate fields. When we use the term ‘anthropology’ or ‘anthropologist’ on this website, we are referring to social or cultural anthropologists.
Anthropologists attempt to understand the social, symbolic and material lives of human groups, contemporary or historic. Through this, anthropologists apply specialist techniques, including:
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Participant Observation
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Directly observing the daily life, modes of behaviour and organisation of the group or community being studied. Participant observation is often described as "fieldwork".
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Questioning
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Anthropologists learn what questions to ask, of whom within a group, when to ask them, and how to ask them. Questions are often recorded to keep the sounds, nuances, intonations and musicality of the speakers or in writing.
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Surveys
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Investigating samples of information, often through formal questionnaires, to develop theories and general understandings about whole populations.
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Fieldwork
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Fieldwork involves a range of activities, including, but not limited to, conducting field surveys, asking the right questions, being a participant observer, joining groups, making mistakes, practising communication methods, making lists, watching, listening, recording observations, taking photographs, drawing things, mapping, taking notes, forming ideas and testing hypotheses.
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When anthropologists apply these techniques and their specialist knowledge, they practice what is called ethnography. Professional anthropologists produce ethnographic reports as part of their practice as professional heritage consultants.
What is the difference between a professional anthropologist and a professional archaeologist?
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Anthropologists and archaeologists alike seek to understand the way humans live and how humans behave.
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To do this, Anthropologists tend to focus on living cultural groups.
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Archaeologists tend to focus on material remains and artefacts within landscapes and environments to seek explanations. Archaeologists often do excavations, sampling of the ground to find artefacts and pointers to the existence of previous human habitation. From their observations archaeologists can develop quite accurate understandings of the way that human groups lived and survived in different places.
Professional anthropologists and professional archaeologists often work together to improve the overall knowledge about cultures, human groups and the places in which they live or have lived.
