Conferences
The New Ethnographer hosts panels, labs and roundtables at conferences around Europe, the Middle East, the USA and Australia. If you would like to host a TNE panel, or spread word at a conference we don't know about, please get in touch. Check out our upcoming and past events below.
European Association of Social Anthropologists Biennial Conference 2020
The LSE Digital Ethnography Collective x The New Ethnographer: Twitter for anthropologists
An interactive workshop in collaboration with @DigEthnogLSE to familiarise anthropologists with the myriad uses of Twitter. We will look at how the platform can be used for networking, research, and public communication. The lab will provide an introduction to Twitter, how anthropologists can harness social media as a fieldsite and for fieldnotes, and as a networking tool.
Suitable for beginners or those familiar with Twitter. Follow live on Twitter using #TNELive on July 21, 11am BST.
American Anthropological Association Annual Conference 2019
In this roundtable, we explore how the relationship among fieldworks have developed over time and can potentially change over time for more effective communication and better fieldwork experience through building on negotiations, reciprocity, mutual trust, and efficient collaboration. We explore perpetuating and arising issues around safety, harassment, ethics, and mental and physical health and wellbeing of ethnographers. The aim of this roundtable is to provide with opportunities to discuss how anthropologists can envision and conduct more compassionate research practice for both themselves and the communities we work with.
Association of Social Anthropologists Annual Conference 2019
This panel addresses the body and the mind of the ethnographer, as the site of a diverse convergence of experiences during fieldwork. Although it has been acknowledged in anthropology that our bodies are our tools of research, the impact of this reality on our bodies is under-explored. Building on existing research into the ubiquity of fieldwork challenges (Pollard 2009) and the importance of treating such experiences and emotions with intellectual rigour (Davies and Spencer 2010), this panel asks how our institutions and professional associations could better support researchers experiencing challenges in the field.