
Categories and Contexts
Anthropological and Historical Studies in Critical Demography
Oxford University Press
Published on 18. March 2004
Book
Hardback
424 pages
978-0-19-927057-6 (ISBN)
Description
Throughout its history as a social science, demography has been associated with an exclusively quantitative orientation for studying social problems. As a result, demographers tend to analyse population issues scientifically through sets of fixed social categories that are divorced from dynamic relationships and local contexts and processes. This volume questions these fixed categories in two ways. First, it examines the historical and political circumstances in which such categories had their provenance, and, second, it reassesses their uncritical applications over space and time in a diverse range of empirical case studies, encouraging throughout a constructive interdisciplinary dialogue involving anthropologists, demographers, historians, and sociologists.
This volume seeks to examine the political complexities that lie at the heart of population studies by focusing on category formation, category use, and category critique. It shows that this takes the form of a dialectic between the needs for clarity of scientific and administrative analysis and the recalcitrant diversity of the social contexts and human processes that generate population change. The critical reflections of each chapter are enriched by meticulous ethnographic fieldwork and historical research drawn from every continent. This volume, therefore, exemplifies a new methodology for research in population studies, one that does not simply accept and re-use the established categories of population science but seeks critically and reflexively to explore, test, and re-evaluate their meanings in diverse contexts. It shows that for demography to realise its full potential it must urgently re-examine and contextualize the social categories used today in population research.
This volume seeks to examine the political complexities that lie at the heart of population studies by focusing on category formation, category use, and category critique. It shows that this takes the form of a dialectic between the needs for clarity of scientific and administrative analysis and the recalcitrant diversity of the social contexts and human processes that generate population change. The critical reflections of each chapter are enriched by meticulous ethnographic fieldwork and historical research drawn from every continent. This volume, therefore, exemplifies a new methodology for research in population studies, one that does not simply accept and re-use the established categories of population science but seeks critically and reflexively to explore, test, and re-evaluate their meanings in diverse contexts. It shows that for demography to realise its full potential it must urgently re-examine and contextualize the social categories used today in population research.
Reviews / Votes
All of these chapters...can be read with interest by demographers; some of them offer striking insights. * Adrian C. Hayes, Population and Development Review, Vol. 32, No. 3 *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
numerous tables
Dimensions
Height: 242 mm
Width: 162 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
765 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-927057-6 (9780199270576)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Simon Szreter has been a Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge since 1992, and is Reader in History and Public Policy in the Faculty of History at Cambridge. He took History Tripos at Cambridge, completed his PhD with the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure in 1983, and was Research Assistant to Lord (Michael) Young of Dartington at the Institute of Community Studies from 1983 to 1984. In 1984 he was appointed Lecturer in Demographic History at Cambridge University. He is the founding editor of Historyandpolicy.org.
Hania Sholkamy is Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Gender and Women's Studies at the American University in Cairo. She received her PhD in Anthropology from the London School of Economics and Political Sciences in 1997. She was Ioma Evans-Pritchard JRF at St Anne's College from 1996 to 1998, and Research Associate at The International Population Council in Cairo. She joined the American University as Assistant Professor of Anthropology in 2000.
A. Dharmalingam received a PhD from the Australian National University, was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Pennsylvania from 1991 to 1994, and joined the Population Studies Centre of the University of Waikato in 1995.
Hania Sholkamy is Visiting Scholar at the Institute for Gender and Women's Studies at the American University in Cairo. She received her PhD in Anthropology from the London School of Economics and Political Sciences in 1997. She was Ioma Evans-Pritchard JRF at St Anne's College from 1996 to 1998, and Research Associate at The International Population Council in Cairo. She joined the American University as Assistant Professor of Anthropology in 2000.
A. Dharmalingam received a PhD from the Australian National University, was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Pennsylvania from 1991 to 1994, and joined the Population Studies Centre of the University of Waikato in 1995.
Editor
, Reader in History and Public Policy, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge
, Visiting Scholar, Institute for Gender and Women's Studies, The American University in Cairo
, Senior Lecturer in Demography, Sociology and Social Policy, University of Waikato, Hamilton
Content
Foreword ; List of Contributors ; SECTION 1 THE HISTORICAL ANTHROPOLOGY OF DEMOGRAPHY AND ITS CATEGORIES ; 1. Contextualising categories: towards a critical reflexive demography ; 2. Objectifying demographic identities ; 3. Malthus' Anti-Rhetorical Rhetoric, or, on the Magical Conversion of the Imaginary into the Real ; SECTION 2 CATEGORIES AS POLITICAL INTERVENTIONS ; 4. Editors' Introduction ; 5. The linguistic construction of social and medical categories in the work of the English General Register Office, 1837-1950 ; 6. Racial / Color Categorization in US and Brazilian Censuses ; 7. Toward a Soviet Order of Things:The 1926 Census and the Making of the Soviet Union ; 8. Making up China's "Black population" ; 9. Internal diaspora and State imagination: Colombia's failure to envision a nation ; 10. Users, non-users, clients, and help-seekers: the use of categories in research on health behaviour ; 11. Etic and emic categories in male sexual health: a case study from Orissa ; SECTION 3 CONTEXTS AS CRITIQUES OF CATEGORIES ; 12. Editors' Introduction ; 13. Measuring the population of a northeast Thai village ; 14. 'Un noviazgo despues de ser casados': Companionate marriage, sexual intimacy, and the modern Mexican family ; 15. Gender Roles and Women's Status: What They Mean to Hausa Muslim Women in Northern Nigeria ; 16. Re-contextualizing the Female-Headed Household: Culture and Agency in Uganda ; 17. Demography's Ecological Frontier: Rethinking the 'Nature' of the Household and Community ; 18. Spillovers, subdivisions and flows: questioning the usefulness of 'bounded container' as the dominant metaphor in demography ; 19. Situating migration in wartime and post-war Mozambique: a critique of "forced migration" research ; Index