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  2. Purnell Model for Cultural Competence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purnell_Model_for_Cultural...

    The Purnell Model for Cultural Competence is a broadly utilized model for teaching and studying intercultural competence, especially within the nursing profession. Employing a method of the model incorporates ideas about cultures, persons, healthcare and health professional into a distinct and extensive evaluation instrument used to establish and evaluate cultural competence in healthcare.

  3. Medical anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_anthropology

    Examples of this practice can be found in medical archives and oral history projects. [ 15 ] The concept of folk medicine was taken up by professional anthropologists in the first half of the twentieth century to demarcate between magical practices , medicine and religion and to explore the role and the significance of popular healers and their ...

  4. List of anthropology journals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_anthropology_journals

    Journal of Contemporary Ethnography: published by SAGE Publications; covers research in ethnography; Medical Anthropology Quarterly: published for the Society for Medical Anthropology by the American Anthropological Association; addresses topics in human health and disease from anthropological perspectives

  5. Ethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnography

    Beginning in the 1950s and early 1960s, anthropologists began writing "bio-confessional" ethnographies that intentionally exposed the nature of ethnographic research. Famous examples include Tristes Tropiques (1955) by Lévi-Strauss, The High Valley by Kenneth Read, and The Savage and the Innocent by David Maybury-Lewis, as well as the mildly ...

  6. Institutional ethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institutional_Ethnography

    IE is best understood as an ethnography of interactions which have been institutionalized, rather than an ethnography of specific companies, organizations or employment sectors, which would be considered industrial sociology or the sociology of work. For the institutional ethnographer, ordinary daily activity becomes the site for an ...

  7. Autoethnography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoethnography

    Anthropologists began conducting ethnographic research in the mid-1800s to study the cultures people they deemed "exotic" and/or "primitive." [15]: 6 Typically, these early ethnographers aimed to merely observe and write "objective" accounts of these groups to provide others a better understanding of various cultures.

  8. Emic and etic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emic_and_etic

    An 'etic' account is a description of a behavior or belief by a social analyst or scientific observer (a student or scholar of anthropology or sociology, for example), in terms that can be applied across cultures; that is, an etic account attempts to be 'culturally neutral', limiting any ethnocentric, political or cultural bias or alienation by ...

  9. Ethnolinguistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnolinguistics

    Ethnosemantics, also called ethnoscience and cognitive anthropology, is a method of ethnographic research and ethnolinguistics that focuses on semantics [6] by examining how people categorize words in their language. Ethnosemantics studies the way people label and classify the cultural, social, and environmental phenomena in their world and ...