Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas

Seminário de Especialidade em Antropologia Biológica e Etnoecologia (not translated)

Code

73200102

Academic unit

Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas

Department

Antropologia

Credits

10

Weekly hours

2

Teaching language

Portuguese

Objectives

At the end of the seminar the students will be able to:
a) Develop theoretical, analytical and methodological skills and competencies that would allow them to design and write a PhD research project within the thematic area of Biological Anthropology and Ethnoecology;
b) Draw up (an initial) available literature review related to the research problem they have outlined;
c) Acquire the ability to integrate their research issues within the main debates and analytical viewpoints which characterise this anthropological area of study, in a sustained and critical manner

Prerequisites

None.

Subject matter

The students should develop their research projects leading to the design of their PhD dissertation in Biological Anthropology and Ethnoecology. This process will be mentored by all supervisors/researchers involved and students attendance to the course. The common learning features aim at sorting out possible interconnections between theoretical and conceptual idioms and relevant methodologies for the drawing up of current research projects.
The seminar includes sessions to discuss work in progress, being selected according to this área of specialization and the students research topics.
Specific analytical perspectives will be reviewed as part of tutorial mentoring.

Bibliography

DENZIN, Nornam K e Lincoln, Yvonna S. (eds) (1994) Handbook of Qualitative Research, London, Sage
CAMPBELl, C.; FUENTES, A.; MACKINNON, K..; PANGER, M. & BEARDER, S. (eds.), 2007,. Primates in Perspective: New York, Oxford University Press.
ELLEN, R., 2006, Ethnobiology and the Science of Humankind, Malden: Blackwell Publishing.
HAENN, N. & WILK, R. (eds.), 2006, The Environment in Anthropology. A Reader in Ecology, Culture, and Sustainable Living, New York: New York University Press.
INGOLD, T., 2000, The Perception of the Environment. Essays in livehood, dwelling ad skill, London: Routledge.
PATERSON, J. & WALLIS, J. (eds.), 2005, Commensalism and Conflict, Norman, Oklahoma: The American Society of Primatologists.
STEPP, J., WYNDHAM, F. & ZARGER, R.. (eds.), 2002, Ethnobiology and Biocultural Diversity, Athens: The International Society of Ethobiology.
WOODROFFE, R., THIRGOOD, S. & RABINOWITZ, A. (eds.), 2005, People and Wildlife: Conflict and Coexistence?, NY: Cambridge Univ. Press

Teaching method

Transferring of general competences within a classroom context (problematization, research design, types of tools and scenarios for managing and implementing research); tutorial supervision, discussion activities designed to enable the acquisition of competencies and habits of reflection, intersubjective critique and clear expression of knowledge. Workshops with invited speakers who have done research in the domain of the current projects.

Evaluation method

Students participation and presentation of the final draft of the dissertation project.

Courses