Open Access, scholarship and digital anthropology | Miller | HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
abernard102@gmail.com 2012-06-25
Summary:
Use the link to access the full text article available from the open access, peer reviewed journal HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. The abstract reads as follows: “This article consists of three arguments. The first advocates the development of Open
Access for anthropological books and journals and critiques the way we have ceded control of dissemination to inappropriate commercial concerns that come to stand for what should have been academic criteria. The second argues that this is best accomplished while being conservative about the process of review, selection, and the canons of scholarship. Third, the article address the emergence of Digital Anthropology, suggesting this has considerable significance for the very conceptualization of anthropology and its future, and suggesting that it can be given definition. But, this should not be confused with the issues of Open Access and review. This is followed by ten helpful and critical comments. In the concluding discussion I respond to these and argue how these points can be taken into account in creating the conditions for a shift to Open Access while defending the concept of Digital Anthropology.”