Sunday, January 29, 2012

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Blog recommendation - Living Anthropologically

I have just discovered the (excellent) blog Living Anthropologically by Jason Antrosio, Associate Professor at Hartwick College. From interesting critiques of Jared Diamond to political and economic anthropology, this blog covers many areas of anthropology in an interesting and accessible way.

The articles are thought-provoking, well researched and backed up with interesting quotes from great-sounding sources (my Amazon Wish List is getting longer with each post I read). Definitely worth a look if you're after something reasonably academic but still readable.

Plus it contains this truly glorious quote from Michel-Rolph Troulliot: At the end of the day, in this age where futures are murky and utopias mere reminders of a lost innocence, we need to fall back on the moral optimism that has been anthropology’s greatest—yet underscored—appeal. But we need to separate that optimism from the naïveté that has been liberalism’s most convenient shield. We need to assume it as a choice—whether we call it moral, philosophical, or aesthetic in the best sense. We need to hang on to it not because we are historically, socially, or politically naïve—indeed, as social scientists we cannot afford such naïveté—but because this is the side of humanity that we choose to prefer, and because this choice is what moved us to anthropology in the first place. We need to assume this optimism because the alternatives are lousy, and because anthropology as a discipline is the best venue through which the West can show an undying faith in the richness and variability of humankind.
-- Michel-Rolph Trouillot, Global Transformations (2003:139)


I recommend starting with the 10 most viewed posts of 2011 and working your way through the archives from there.

Disclaimer: Living Anthropologically does not know I exist. I just enjoy the blog.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Bayanihan!

Last Monday I attended a launch for new researched conducted by the Northern Ireland Council for Ethnic Minorities (NICEM).

The study is a comprehensive look of the small but growing Filipino community in Northern Ireland, and the ways in which this community is likely to be effected by the economic downturn. Perhaps most interestingly, the study sums up the immigration process for Tier 2 migrant workers in the United Kingdom and the challenges in obtaining (and keeping) these work permits.

At a time when anti-immigrant sentiment seems to be rising in the UK, this study helps to show that the negative propaganda spouted by some newspapers, particularly with regard to the immigrant's right to public funds, is misinformed.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Friday Fling - The best Articles I've Read This Week

Here are some of articles I've enjoyed most this week.
Have you read anything particularly interesting? Feel free to share in the comments.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Immigration, Multiculturalism and British Future

In the wake of a recent report by think tank British Future, the UK media has been abuzz with articles on immigration and the role of immigrants in Britain. The report titled Hopes and Fears: The British Future State of the Nation Report 2012 makes some sweeping generalisations, but here are the key highlights in relation to immigration and integration:


  • Many people wildly and worryingly exaggerate
    the scale of asylum, but believe that Britain is 
    a country where we welcome new neighbours. 
    Most of us think it takes less than three years 
    for “them” to become “us” when somebody 
    moves to a new area.
  • We think that Britain 
    is less polite, as well as less racist. Black and Asian people are most likely to think race relations got better; relying more on the lived experience of everyday integration that the rarer flashpoints which inevitably catch headlines.
  • The poll shows that we recognise benefits 
    and pressures from immigration. It won’t be enough to say that it has been great for food and football if people remain so concerned that impacts on jobs and housing aren't addressed. People want integration to work . . .  we don't want segregated schools in multi-ethnic towns but don't think which cricket team people cheer for is important.
  • While 16% of the mostly retired 
    65 plus age group ranked immigration as their number one concern, half of that, 8%, of the 16-24s did, and only 5% of the 25-34 age group.
  • Housing is where public fear impact of 
    immigration has hit hardest. Some 51% . . . support the idea that government should encourage mixed schools.
  • Most people don’t do too badly when asked to estimate roughly how many people in Britain were born abroad - but they massively exaggerate the number of refugees in Britain . . . Four out of ten people believe that more that 10% of the population, six million people, are refugees. And one in 20 believe that most people in Britain today have been granted asylum.
The study touches on many other issues, such as the Tebbit cricket test and whether immigration has been good for British cuisine.

A couple of other articles well worth reading this week are this one on the link between unemployment and immigration, and this one on the future of anti-racism in Britain.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Street Art

I recently went to see the Street Art exhibition at the Ulster Museum. An excellent exhibition consisting of works from local artists such as KVLR and international street artists like Banksy, it got me thinking of the role art, and street art, plays in depicting a city. I find street art and murals particularly interesting where they crossover with politics and public opinion. When they make a statement. Banksy does this extraordinarily well the world over, combining recognisable pop culture figures with the imagery of war to convey a powerful message with striking visual vocabulary. Napalm is the best example of this that comes to mind.

Belfast is of course well know for its political murals, and while there are still many murals depicting men in balaclavas toting guns, newer murals trend towards a celebration Northern Ireland's cultural and social history without portraying the violence. In comparison to the gritty murals, Belfast does of course have its fair share of commissioned art out on the street. Pieces such as the Beacon of Hope and the recent sculpture Rise emphasise the positive changes in Belfast following the Good Friday Agreement. These do not have the immediacy of street art nor represent the public opinion. Instead they speak of what Belfast hopes to become.

To me, street art and art on the street seem to hold very different purposes. Street art is the message of the person on the ground, simply showing others how they see things while art on the street reflects how political figures hope to influence the way others view the world.

Edited to add: Speaking of art, check this out.