“…The present paper is focused on the Anthropological and Ethnographic approaches to Social Representations Theory (SRT), as part of a larger research project launched by de Rosa in 1994, 1 aimed at meta-theoretically analysing the entire corpus of scientific literature on SRT, in order to assess how the theory was diffused and disseminated conceptually, in respect to other theories, thematically and empirically across time and geo-cultural contexts (de Rosa 2013a(de Rosa , 2013b(de Rosa , 2015a(de Rosa , b, 2016a(de Rosa , b, 2017de Rosa et al 2016de Rosa et al , 2017ade Rosa et al , b, c, 2018. Developed by Serge Moscovici in the 1950s in France, Social Representations Theory was meant as an important building block in creating an European Social Psychology, complementary to the traditional approaches in Social Psychology (Moscovici and Marková 2006), yet with an overarching aim at bridging the gap between the disciplines in social sciences and their isolated constructs within an emerging supra-disciplinary field, a new map for social thought (de Rosa 2013a(de Rosa , 2017Jodelet 2008Jodelet , 2018Kalampalikis and Haas 2008;Rateau et al 2011;Wagner et al 1999).…”