Leon Anderson (academic)

Last updated
ISBN 9780520079892
  • Desafortunados: Um Estudo Sobre o Povo da Rua (1998) ISBN   9788532620767
  • Analyzing Social Settings: A Guide to Qualitative Observation and Analysis 4th Edition (2005) ISBN   9780534528614
  • ANALIZA UKŁADÓW SPOŁECZNYCHP: rzewodnik metodologiczny po badaniach jakościowych (2009) ISBN   9788373833999
  • Deviance: Social Constructions and Blurred Boundaries (2017) ISBN   9780520965935
  • Selected articles

    Related Research Articles

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Ethnography</span> Systematic study of people and cultures

    Ethnography is a branch of anthropology and the systematic study of individual cultures. Ethnography explores cultural phenomena from the point of view of the subject of the study. Ethnography is also a type of social research that involves examining the behavior of the participants in a given social situation and understanding the group members' own interpretation of such behavior.

    Participant observation is one type of data collection method by practitioner-scholars typically used in qualitative research and ethnography. This type of methodology is employed in many disciplines, particularly anthropology, sociology, communication studies, human geography, and social psychology. Its aim is to gain a close and intimate familiarity with a given group of individuals and their practices through an intensive involvement with people in their cultural environment, usually over an extended period of time.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Qualitative research</span> Form of research

    Qualitative research is a type of research that aims to gather and analyse non-numerical (descriptive) data in order to gain an understanding of individuals' social reality, including understanding their attitudes, beliefs, and motivation. This type of research typically involves in-depth interviews, focus groups, or observations in order to collect data that is rich in detail and context. Qualitative research is often used to explore complex phenomena or to gain insight into people's experiences and perspectives on a particular topic. It is particularly useful when researchers want to understand the meaning that people attach to their experiences or when they want to uncover the underlying reasons for people's behavior. Qualitative methods include ethnography, grounded theory, discourse analysis, and interpretative phenomenological analysis. Qualitative research methods have been used in sociology, anthropology, political science, psychology, communication studies, social work, folklore, educational research, information science and software engineering research.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Autoethnography</span> Research method using personal experience

    Autoethnography is a form of ethnographic research in which a researcher connects personal experiences to wider cultural, political, and social meanings and understandings. It is considered a form of qualitative and/or arts-based research.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Grounded theory</span> Qualitative research methodology

    Grounded theory is a systematic methodology that has been largely applied to qualitative research conducted by social scientists. The methodology involves the construction of hypotheses and theories through the collecting and analysis of data. Grounded theory involves the application of inductive reasoning. The methodology contrasts with the hypothetico-deductive model used in traditional scientific research.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Narrative inquiry</span> Discipline within qualitative research

    Narrative inquiry or narrative analysis emerged as a discipline from within the broader field of qualitative research in the early 20th century, as evidence exists that this method was used in psychology and sociology. Narrative inquiry uses field texts, such as stories, autobiography, journals, field notes, letters, conversations, interviews, family stories, photos, and life experience, as the units of analysis to research and understand the way people create meaning in their lives as narratives.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Visual sociology</span> Area of sociology

    Visual sociology is an area of sociology concerned with the visual dimensions of social life.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">James Spradley</span>

    James P. Spradley (1933–1982) was a social scientist and a professor of anthropology at Macalester College. Spradley wrote or edited 20 books on ethnography and qualitative research including The Cultural Experience: Ethnography in Complex Society (1972), Deaf Like Me (1979), The Ethnographic Interview (1979), and Participant Observation (1980).

    Online ethnography is an online research method that adapts ethnographic methods to the study of the communities and cultures created through computer-mediated social interaction. As modifications of the term ethnography, cyber-ethnography, online ethnography and virtual ethnography designate particular variations regarding the conduct of online fieldwork that adapts ethnographic methodology. There is no canonical approach to cyber-ethnography that prescribes how ethnography is adapted to the online setting. Instead individual researchers are left to specify their own adaptations. Netnography is another form of online ethnography or cyber-ethnography with more specific sets of guidelines and rules, and a common multidisciplinary base of literature and scholars. This article is not about a particular neologism, but the general application of ethnographic methods to online fieldwork as practiced by anthropologists, sociologists, and other scholars.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Field research</span> Collection of information outside a laboratory, library or workplace setting

    Field research, field studies, or fieldwork is the collection of raw data outside a laboratory, library, or workplace setting. The approaches and methods used in field research vary across disciplines. For example, biologists who conduct field research may simply observe animals interacting with their environments, whereas social scientists conducting field research may interview or observe people in their natural environments to learn their languages, folklore, and social structures.

    Critical ethnography applies a critical theory based approach to ethnography. It focuses on the implicit values expressed within ethnographic studies and, therefore, on the unacknowledged biases that may result from such implicit values. It has been called critical theory in practice. In the spirit of critical theory, this approach seeks to determine symbolic mechanisms, to extract ideology from action, and to understand the cognition and behaviour of research subjects within historical, cultural, and social frameworks.

    Institutional ethnography (IE) is an alternative approach of studying and understanding the social. IE has been described as an alternative philosophical paradigm, sociology, or (qualitative) research method. IE explores the social relations that structure people's everyday lives, specifically by looking at the ways that people interact with one another in the context of social institutions and understanding how those interactions are institutionalized. 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 investigation of social organization. IE was first developed by Dorothy E. Smith as a Marxist feminist sociology "for women, for people"; and is now used by researchers in social sciences, education, nursing, human services and policy research as a method for mapping the translocal relations that coordinate people's activities within institutions.

    Jaber Fandy "Jay" Gubrium is an American sociologist and social psychologist. His research perspective is the narrative ethnography of caregiving, especially care constructed in organizational context. He is a professor emeritus in the University of Missouri Department of Sociology.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Video ethnography</span>

    Video ethnography is the video recording of the stream of activity of subjects in their natural setting, in order to experience, interpret, and represent culture and society. Ethnographic video, in contrast to ethnographic film, cannot be used independently of other ethnographic methods, but rather as part of the process of creation and representation of societal, cultural, and individual knowledge. It is commonly used in the fields of visual anthropology, visual sociology, visual ethnography and cultural studies. Uses of video in ethnography include the recording of certain processes and activities, visual note-taking, and ethnographic diary-keeping.

    Netnography is a specific type of qualitative social media research. It adapts the methods of ethnography to understand social interaction in contemporary digital communications contexts. Netnography is a specific set of research practices related to data collection, analysis, research ethics, and representation, rooted in participant observation. In netnography, a significant amount of the data originates in and manifests through the digital traces of naturally occurring public conversations recorded by contemporary communications networks. Netnography uses these conversations as data. It is an interpretive research method that adapts the traditional, in-person participant observation techniques of anthropology to the study of interactions and experiences manifesting through digital communications.

    David A. Snow is a Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Irvine.

    John Franklin Lofland is an American sociologist best known for his studies of the peace movement and for his first book, Doomsday Cult: A Study of Conversion, Proselytization, and Maintenance of Faith, which was based on field work among a group of Unification Church members in California in the 1960s. It is considered to be one of the most important and widely cited studies of the process of religious conversion, and one of the first modern sociological studies of a new religious movement.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Annette Markham</span> American academic

    Annette Markham is an American academic, Chair Professor of Media Literacy and Public Engagement at Utrecht University, Adjunct Professor at RMIT University in Melbourne, and Adjunct Professor of Information Studies at Aarhus University, Denmark. She is Director of RMIT's Digital Ethnography Research Centre. She has served on the executive committee of the Association of Internet Researchers since 2013. She publishes research in the area of Internet studies, digital identity, social interaction, innovative qualitative methods for social research, and Internet research ethics.

    Kathleen Marian Charmaz was the developer of constructivist grounded theory, a major research method in qualitative research internationally and across many disciplines and professions. She was professor emerita of sociology at Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, California, and former director of its Faculty Writing Program. Charmaz’s background was in occupational therapy and sociology. Charmaz’s areas of expertise included grounded theory, symbolic interactionism, chronicity, death and dying, qualitative health research, scholarly writing, sociological theory, social psychology, research methods, health and medicine, aging, sociology of emotions, and the body.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Video Data Analysis</span> Methodology for the analysis of video material in social sciences

    Video Data Analysis (VDA) is a curated multi-disciplinary collection of tools, techniques, and quality criteria intended for analyzing the content of visuals to study driving dynamics of social behavior and events in real-life settings. It often uses visual data in combination with other data types. VDA is employed across the social sciences such as sociology, psychology, criminology, business research, and education research.

    References

    1. 1 2 "Leon Anderson".
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    3. "Leon Anderson - Google Scholar".
    4. "ANALIZA UKŁADÓW SPOŁECZNYCH Przewodnik metodologiczny po badaniach jakościowych".
    5. "Mental Health Courts in America: Promise and Challenges". doi:10.1177/0002764212465616. S2CID   145764344.{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
    6. Snow, David A.; Benford, Robert D.; Anderson, Leon (January 1986). "Fieldwork Roles and Informational Yield: A Comparison of Alternative Settings and Roles". Urban Life. 14 (4): 377–408. doi:10.1177/0098303986014004002. S2CID   144053675.
    7. Anderson, Leon; Calhoun, Thomas C. (1992). "Facilitative Aspects of Field Research with Deviant Street Populations". Sociological Inquiry. 62 (4): 490–498. doi:10.1111/j.1475-682X.1992.tb00297.x.
    8. Snow, David A.; Anderson, Leon; Koegel, Paul (1994). "Distorting Tendencies in Research on the Homeless". American Behavioral Scientist. 37 (4): 461–475. doi:10.1177/0002764294037004004. S2CID   143943026.
    9. ""Analyzing Social Settings: A Guide to Qualitative Observation and Analysis" by Lofland & Lofland (Book Review)". ProQuest .
    10. Anderson, Leon (2006). "Analytic Autoethnography". Journal of Contemporary Ethnography. 35 (4): 373–395. doi:10.1177/0891241605280449. S2CID   220355251.
    11. Anderson, Leon; Austin, Mathew (2012). "Auto-ethnography in leisure studies". Leisure Studies. 31 (2): 131–146. doi:10.1080/02614367.2011.599069. S2CID   143808304.
    12. "Winners of Charles Horton Cooley Award for Recent Book".
    13. "Scholarly Achievement Award".
    14. "The Pacific Sociological Association Distinguished Scholarship Award".
    15. "Past Recipients".
    Leon Anderson
    Born1950
    NationalityAmerican
    Occupation(s)Sociologist, academic, researcher
    AwardsCharles Horton Cooley Award, Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction
    Scholarly Achievement Award, North Central Sociological Association
    Distinguished Scholarship Award, Pacific Sociological Association
    Academic background
    EducationB.A
    M.A
    Ph.D.
    Alma mater Portland State University
    University of Texas at Austin