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Course Type: Postgraduate (taught)
Training Provider: Macquarie University School/Institute/Dept./Centre: Department of Anthropology
How can we analyse the above claims about culture?The Applied Anthropology program at Macquarie is one of the first in Australia that focuses on training current or future professionals to critically assess both cultural impacts and claims about them. Based on the research areas of its members, the Department of Anthropology offers coursework units and research supervision that address the issues that face those who deal with ‘culture’ in professional settings.
Traditionally, the focus of Applied Anthropology has been on social and cultural aspects of development and policy research, including social impact assessment, advisory work among Australian Aboriginal communities, and work with migrants and refugees. This remains an important sphere within which anthropologists are employed. However, in recent years there has been a marked increase in interest in the cultural determinants of people's behaviour. Professionals working in a range of fields have been told that ‘culture matters’, but they have not been told how. The theoretical insights and research methodologies of anthropology provide an answer to this question. They offer both a critical understanding of ‘culture’ as well as a unique hands-on research methodology. The degree prepares students for professional careers - ranging from international development to public health, urban planning and advertising - in which they have to deal with questions of culture and cultural difference. Those who wish to gain a graduate qualification in the area of applied anthropology, social aspects of development studies, consultancy and policy research with a specific focus on the local and community level. Graduates pursue careers in areas including development agencies, NGOs, international institutions (United Nations, World Bank, Asian Development Bank etc.), Government departments, human resources, consultancies, legislatures and courts, health providers, advertising, and market research companies. Study ProgrammeCore units:
Electives: Students also complete three elective units. At least one of these must be from the range ANTH800-840. A maximum of two may be approved elective units from other disciplines.
Study plan: Recommended study plan for full-time students:
Important note: To be considered full-time, students are required to enrol in a minimum of 12 credit points each semester. This is especially important for international students, who must be enrolled full-time in order to satisfy their visa requirements. For more information, contact Macquarie International. Part-time students have more flexibility concerning the number of units in which they enrol each semester, but are generally expected to complete the degree over four semesters. Course InformationCredit points: 36 Commencement: March, August Length of candidature:
Attendance: full-time or part-time; most units meet in the evenings, 6-8 pm
Hits: 1738 Course Details
Staff: http://www.anth.mq.edu.au/staff.html Entry Requirements: Bachelor degree with a substantial social science component and/or suitable professional experience. Intake/Applications (previous year): 20/30 Course Duration: Full-time: 3 semesters (approx. 18 months) Part-time: 4 semesters (approx. 2 years) N.b. Due to visa restrictions, international students must be enrolled full-time throughout the coursse. Language(s) of Instruction:
Mode of Study:
Thematic Focus:
Country(ies):
Town(s) or City(ies): Sydney Course fees: Local students: HECS-HELP International students: AUD$20,700 (approx. £8,700) -- 2006 price. Scholarships & Awards: MUIS international fee-waiver scholarships Two MUIS fee-waiver scholarships are available for international students for the August 2006 intake (i.e semester 2). All international students who apply for the MAA are eligible for this scholarship, although one will be reserved for a student from a low income country (as defined by the World Bank). Application will be judged primarily on academic merit, although work experience and relevance of proposed research will also be taken into account. The scholarship is valued at over $20,000 in waived fees. Further information is available at: http://www.international.mq.edu.au/scholarships/index.html Further Funding Information: http://www.international.mq.edu.au/scholarships/index.html Course's Webpage: http://www.anth.mq.edu.au/maa School/Institute/Dept./Centre
Department of Anthropology
Training Provider: Macquarie University Contact Telephone: +61-2-9850 8095 Courses: 1 The field of anthropology is enormously diverse in its range of subjects. At its broadest of levels, anthropology is the comparative study of societies and cultures. The human experience in all its diversity is its subject matter, and it approaches that experience through a variety of methods and theoretical perspectives. It asks interpretative questions about behaviour, meaning, and value between different societies and cultures. Why do people do what they do? Why do people in different societies do different things? Why do different people in the same society (for example, male or female, young or old, Catholic or Protestant, heterosexual, gay, or indifferent, Aboriginal or Macedonian) do different things?
Anthropologists study groups of people and culturally significant objects which constitute different ways of life. They generally obtain their knowledge and understanding through participating in and observing the lives of the people they work among. Through this methodology, known as fieldwork, which involves long-term and intensive participant-observation, anthropologists gain a detailed understanding of the cultural world of other peoples. People studied may include, for example, workers on the shop-floor of a factory, the inhabitants of a suburb or a city zone, people who live by hunting and gathering in the Amazon, corporate managers in the 'flexible workplace', indigenous Australian artists, farmers in Western Queensland, fans of Harry Potter books, opium-growers in the highlands of Southeast Asia, members of a Church or sect, groups of migrants or refugees, tourists, or any other people following a distinctive way of life. Although the social contexts in which they work are extremely diverse, anthropologists share a commitment to exploring and understanding different ways of life and cultural perspectives, and illuminating these for others. Anthropology not only allows us to develop a sensitivity for cultural difference but it also allows us to reflect on our own cultural world with an altered perspective. Anthropology endeavours not only to "make the strange familiar, but to make the familiar strange", thereby encouraging us to challenge our taken for granted assumptions about the world. It is also important to realise that anthropology is not only a subject of theoretical interest; rather, it has numerous practical applications. 'Applied anthropology' refers to the application of anthropological knowledge, theories, concepts and methods to concrete problems (e.g. development issues, including Social Impact Assessment, understanding of poverty, livelihoods or externally driven processes change and their social and cultural impacts). Anthropologists doing applied work contribute to policy development and shaping interventions. They are increasingly employed in the development world, by government, non-government and multilateral aid agencies, as consultants and evaluators. They are also employed in the corporate world, for example in market research and consumer behaviour studies.
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