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What are we going to do today?
Ethical Issues in Anthropological ResearchA few examples of historical blunders in ethical issues
AAA Statement of EthicsOur dillemmas
Our personal ethical values What are they?
Where do they come from?
How do they influence our lives?
Why Ethical Issues in Anthropology? Research with human beings Taking away materials (archeological sites) Context of inequality [researcher and
researched] Use of knowledge—public opinion/ public
policies/ intervention strategies—impact on the lives of people we study
Demands from the ‘subjects’
Anthropologists: web of their relationships Subjects Academic institution (university,
research institutions) Professional community Sponsoring institutions/organizations Broader public
Yanomami
Napolean Chagnon James Neel 1968 measles epidemic Video portrayal Darkness in El Dorado:
How Scientists and Journalists Devastated the Amazon by John Tierney, 2000
Scandal snowballs
2001 AAA task force begins inquiry, findings approved
2002 AAA votes to rescind approval of the El Dorado Task Force findings
AAA Statements on Ethics Adopted by the council of the AAA-May 1971Preamble“ They are involved with their discipline, their
colleagues, their students, their sponsors, their subjects, their own and host governments, the particular individuals and groups with whom they do their field work in the nations within which they work, and the study of processes and issues affecting general human welfare.”
AAA statements contd…...“It is prime responsibility of
anthropologists to anticipate these and to plan to resolve them in such a way as to do damage neither to those whom they study nor, insofar as possible, to their scholarly community. Where these conditions cannot be met, the anthropologist would be well-advised not to pursue the particular piece of research.” (Italics added)
Responsibility to those studied Rights, interests, and sensitivities of those
studied must be safeguarded Communication of the aims Right to annonymity (unintentional compromise) No exploitation--fair return/compensation Reflection upon foreseeable repurcussions No clandestine reporting/research (no secret
reports to sponsors) Accept the cultural and social plurality
Responsibilities to the Public Full public disclosue of the findings Integretiy in presenting their findings--
opinions and the bases of them Contribute to an “adequate definition of
reality” upon which public opinion and public policy may be based
Honesty--and cognizant of limitations
Responsibility to the Discipline No secret research or any research which
cannot be freely derived and publicly reported--avoid even the appearance of doing clandestine research
Not jeopardize future research-- “commitment to honesty, open inquiry, clear communication of sponsorship and research aims, and concern for the welfare and privacy of informants
Responsibility to Discipline contd... No plagiarism Non-discrimination in hiring, retention
and advancement
Responsibility to Students Non-discrimination in selection Alert students on ethical issues and
problems Responsive to students’ interests,
opinions and desires in their academic work and relationships
Realistic counselling in career opportunitie
Responsibility to students contd... Supervse, encourage and support Communicate well on expectation from their
course of study, Fair and transparent evaluation Acknowledgements of students assistancship Due credit--co-authorship if used for
publication
Responsibility to the Sponsors Honest about their aims based on full
knowledge about the sponsors’ aims, history
Clear about unconditionality so that academic work could not be compromised
Accepting only through full disclosure of information from the sponsors
Responsibility to GovernmentsHost Government and Own Government Honesty in communication Demanding assurance of non-
interference No secret reporting, debriefings or
research to be accepted
Bioprospecting: the search for new chemicals in living things
that will have some medical or commercial use.
-- the collecting and testing of biological samples (plants, animals, micro-organisms)
-- and the collecting of indigenous knowledge to help find and exploit genetic or biochemical resources
Or Biopiracy? Appropriation of the
knowledge and genetic resources of farming and indigenous communities by individuals or institutions who seek exclusive monopoly control (patents or intellectual property) over these resources and knowledge.
Players in the Chiapas Bioprospecting/piracy issue: Consejo (original group of 11 Mayan
organizations, 13 other groups later joined in support)
International Cooperative Biodiversity Groups (ICBG) -- U.S. Government’s National Institute of Health (NIH)
University of Georgia Anthropologists RAFI (now ETC)
Issues Ownership/control of knowledge Prior Informed Consent (PIC) Moral/religious objections to patenting
life and GMO Insufficient governmental regulatory
mechanisms