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Social-Science Research by North Americans Abroad: Some Reflections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2022

Extract

The break-up of colonial empires in Asia and Africa since World War II; the rise of sternly nationalistic regimes in many non-western countries; the great unpopularity of America's undertakings in Viet Nam; and persisting international tensions have all contributed to the difficulties faced by American social scientists engaged in research abroad. These difficulties have mounted so in recent years that the central problem for North American social scientists could soon become not what to study, but where to study; and one may expect the situation to grow worse, not better. In the Middle East, recent hostilities have made North American social scientists less than welcome in many countries; while “Operation Camelot” in Latin America --when Department of Defense funds were secretly employed to support allegedly “pure” research--did the cause of honest social science much harm.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association For Iranian Studies, Inc 1968

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Footnotes

*

The author wishes to express his thanks to Ali Banuazizi, Jacqueline W. Mintz and Majid Tehranian for their useful criticisms of earlier versions of this paper. The responsibility for the arguments advanced here and for any errors they may contain, however, rests solely with the author.

The author is Professor of Anthropology at Yale University. He and his wife, a linguist, spent a year in Iran as Fulbright research fellows during 1966-67. Their investigations were made in villages west of Shiraz, in the Province of Fars.