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Data management for social anthropology ADVANCED MODULE.

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Presentation on theme: "Data management for social anthropology ADVANCED MODULE."— Presentation transcript:

1 data management for social anthropology ADVANCED MODULE

2 [OUTLINE] 1. DOCUMENTING YOUR DATA i. Paper archives and indexes ii. Digital archives iii. Brainstorm iv. Techniques and software v. Categories and ontology vi. Sharing 2. ETHICAL AND LEGAL ISSUES i. Risks and issues in data dissemination ii. Some tips and techniques to make data safer iii. Data Protection Act 1998 iv. Freedom of Information Act 2000 v. Intellectual Property and copyright

3 N.B. - THIS IS A P A R T I C I P A T O R Y EXERCISE!

4 1

5 docume ntation & metadat a

6 http://archives.lse.ac.uk/GetImage.ashx?db =Catalog&type=default&fname=Malinowski\ Malinowski_3_18_5.jpg

7 For instance, my present mode of life: I turn in too late, I get up at irregular hours. Too little time devoted to observation, contact with natives, too much to barren collecting of information. I rest too frequently, and indulge in "demoralization". I also thought about problems of keeping a diary. How immensely difficult it is to formulate the endless variety of things in the current of a life. Keeping a diary as a problem of psychological analysis: to isolate essential elements, to classify them (from what point of view?), then, in describing them indicate more or less clearly what is their actual importance at the given moment, proportion; my subjective reaction, etc. (Malinowski, B. 1989 A Diary in the Strict Sense of the Term. Stanford: Stanford University Press; entry for 4.11.1918, p. 247)

8 what is an index, and how does it work?

9 http://www.alanmacfa rlane.com/FILES/fraz er.htm

10 why paper-slip indexes collapse: size, untransportability, cannot be accessed remotely shifting, complex, rigid classification difficult to find cards in the dataset

11 http://www.alanmacfarlane.com/topics_fron t.htm

12 http://www.esds.ac.uk/findingData/sn Description.asp?sn= 5801&key=caplan+f ood

13 http://www.datacit e.org/repolist http://oad.simmons.edu/oadwiki/Data_ repositories http://www.opendo ar.org/

14 documentation WHAT TECHNIQUES, CATEGORIES, SOFTWARE, ISSUES ? BRAINSTORM

15 TECHNIQUES&SOFTWARE - FORMAT-SPECIFIC: -digital: linking and back-linking, tagging, searching, horizontal classification -analogue: hierarchical classification, manual tagging OR -GENERIC: e.g. colour-coding, categories, dates, place names… - REPORTS CAN HELP! - KEEP AS MUCH OF YOUR DATA AND DOCUMENTATION IN THE SAME PLACE - SOFTWARE MIGHT PROVE USEFUL – wikis, databases, reference managers, spreadsheets..

16 CATEGORIES/ONTOLOGY -EVALUATE PROS & CONS (time consuming, expensive, but useful in the long-term and for analysis) -PROJECT- & FOCUS-SPECIFIC - VOLATILE!  BETTER TO STICK TO GENERIC DESCRIPTORS? (e.g. places and personal names, more easily remembered; dates; …) - NEED DOCUMENTING AND UPDATING: make an index of the categories you use, and systematically update as you add new ones

17 HOW TO DEVELOP AND INDEX

18 SHARING WITH: - your supervisor - peers - other academics - research participants - wider audiences

19 agree on rules and conventions on mode of sharing and file naming

20 USEFUL TOOLS: - institutional networked storage -virtual learning/research environments - Dropbox - GoogleDocs - Google+ - academic web networks - blogs - wikis - digital repositories

21 http://www.esds. ac.uk/

22 2

23 law & ethics

24 http://openanthropology.files.wordpress.co m/2010/11/archive.jpg

25 RISKS of DISSEMIN ATION: -online storage - sharing and consent -crossing borders

26 http://w ww.theas a.org/ethi cs/guideli nes.shtml

27 TIPS [multiple copies] [restrict access] [log out] [firewalls & anti-virus] [destroy data if necessary] [encryption] [tiered consent] [anonymisation]

28 DATA PROTECTION ACT 1998 -data may only be used for the purposes it was collected for -data must not be disclosed to other parties without consent - individuals have a right of access to information held about them - personal information may be kept for no longer than is necessary, and may not be sent outside the EEA

29 FREEDOM of INFORMATION ACT 2000 -gives right to request access to recorded information (such as research data) held by public sector organisations; or be informed whether information is held -exceptions: personal data, data accessible by other means, meant for publication or subject to confidentiality agreement

30 iNTELLECTUAL pROPERTY copyright = creative works fixed in material form depends on academic status/institution/employment position right to control copying, adaptation, publishing, performance, broadcast of the work, and their conditions exceptions for personal use and teaching limited time duration

31 SHARING & PUBL]SHING: ethics, politics, analyitics – your views


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