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2019
DOI: 10.1111/amet.12791
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The business of anthropology and the European refugee regime

Abstract: Metaphors of flooding and “flows” are often applied in the public sphere to the phenomena of displacement and migration, but there are also “waves” and “tides” of humanitarian actors, “voluntourists,” and researchers now focused on refugees. Humanitarian, security, and anthropological interventions in the European “refugee crisis” of 2015–16 often operate according to a shared logic of urgency and crisis. Key problems and pitfalls in current anthropological trends in the study of displacement on Europe's doors… Show more

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Cited by 109 publications
(66 citation statements)
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References 103 publications
(78 reference statements)
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“…This gives credence to Cabot's () critique of a “crisis‐chasing” mode in current anthropology, particularly with regard to the “wave” of research on the refugee crisis. She notes how this inclination to jump on the “hot spots” of world events reveals anthropology's institutional embeddedness—the “business of anthropology”—in a field that “rewards crisis chasing” through the imperative of quick output and high impact enforced on academic staff, funding mechanisms that require demonstrable societal relevance of project proposals, and generally ideas of prestige and value that anthropologists also impose on themselves from an urge to “do good” through their research.…”
Section: Measuring Impact Finding Relevancementioning
confidence: 71%
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“…This gives credence to Cabot's () critique of a “crisis‐chasing” mode in current anthropology, particularly with regard to the “wave” of research on the refugee crisis. She notes how this inclination to jump on the “hot spots” of world events reveals anthropology's institutional embeddedness—the “business of anthropology”—in a field that “rewards crisis chasing” through the imperative of quick output and high impact enforced on academic staff, funding mechanisms that require demonstrable societal relevance of project proposals, and generally ideas of prestige and value that anthropologists also impose on themselves from an urge to “do good” through their research.…”
Section: Measuring Impact Finding Relevancementioning
confidence: 71%
“…The predominance of words that refer to critical issues appears to support Heath Cabot's () recent contention, in AE ’s August 2019 issue, that (too) much anthropology today is driven by “crisis chasing.” The frequency of these words in itself, however, does not tell us much about how anthropologists engage with these issues, nor does it elucidate how relevance is assigned to areas of research that appear to be more urgent than others. A closer examination of how AE ’s authors use keywords in their research and writing offers a more nuanced picture of current trends.…”
mentioning
confidence: 75%
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“…AE ’s forums all appear in the print edition, but they have not supplanted traditional research articles, which remain the journal's raison d’être. Nor should research on cutting‐edge political events like the refugee crisis, or “crisis chasing,” as Heath Cabot () terms it, become the norm in our discipline.…”
Section: What Seems To Have Workedmentioning
confidence: 99%