Cite as:
Okune, Angela and Adams, James. 2018. "Analysis of Collaboration in Data Gathering and Data Production." In PhD Orals Document: Querying Analyses of Collaboration, created by Angela Okune and James Adams. PhD Orals Document. UC Irvine Anthropology. October.
This essay is part of three orals documents submitted by University of California, Irvine Anthropology doctoral student Angela Okune i n partial...Read more
Ordered by research life cycle phase:
Research Design
Holmes, Douglas R., and George E. Marcus. 2008. “Collaboration Today and the Re-Imagination of the Classic Scene of Fieldwork...Read more
This section foregrounds annotations based on our analytic structure specifically looking at collaboration in data production.
Analysts in the annotated set are thinking of collaboration as productive tension and transnational and across unequal economic and material realities. Two models of collaboration (a “big science” model and intimate authorship arrangements) are mentioned. Collaboration between humans - non-humans, between making knowledge and social practice, and both within and beyond the academy are also mentioned. Interestingly, Choy et al. (2009) mention smell as a material constraint that undergirds collaboration, asking: “Can humans and mushrooms really be collaborators? Might all knowledge, then, require collaboration?.”
Aellah et al. (2016) highlight the importance of maintaining the analytic distinction between public and private science. Analysts thinking about collaboration at the data collection stage were worried about how the prevalent academic institutional models for accounting for collaboration which split research contribution into fractions; and that global health research invariably involves major economic and political inequalities that should worry transnational medical researchers persistently.
Although they use the terms global North (describing it as former European colonial powers and their North American successors) and global South (the formerly colonized world), Aellah et al. (2016) note interestingly that increasingly inequality is in fact appearing between a global middle class and the vast majority rather than between countries.
Choy et al. (2009) posit an approach of focusing on connections across different geo- graphical sites, seeing the sites as socially and materially connected by a commodity. They note that they are not interested in “comparing” the site of production of a commodity with the site of its consumption, as if they were two different “cases,” rather they trace the concrete connections between production and consumption as a way to move away from connections as understood in terms of the functional requirements of capitalism or an integrated world system. Taking on such an approach engenders a sensitivity to the fact that some localities are more powerful than others and have the ability to tie others to them—and sometimes to remake the others—in ways the less powerful have little choice over. I find this approach a mindful awareness to move away from a binary classification system that continues to replicate many other binaries (producer/consumer; designer/user, etc.) and I am keen to think about how to address this in my own project with the language that I use.
This essay is part of a broader orals document querying collaborative formations. Works were categorized under one part of the “research life cycle” as a heuristic. Sub-essays within the orals doc can be accessed directly through the following links: Research Design (Artifacts | Analysis); Data Gathering and Production (Artifacts | Analysis); Data Analysis (Artifacts | Analysis); Artifact Production (Artifacts | Analysis); Dissemination (Artifacts | Analysis); Political Practice (Artifacts | Analysis).
A few of the notable annotations are included below for quick review. Each can be clicked to view it fully. A full list of all annotations submitted for works included under this phase of the research life cycle can be found here.
AO: In intro: Global North (former European colonial powers and their North American successors) and global South (formerly colonized world). The analysts note interestingly that
AO: The analysts note that research ethics cannot be separated from the economic context of global research (“Material realities dictate ethical possibilities, and
AO: Arguing against, “big science” model, Tsing notes that since good fieldwork is supposed to change the fieldworker’s research questions, standardized questions, goals, and methods
AO: The analysts argue that every contributor should be able to draw the project into new and original directions and that the project should continually shift because of its
AO: Smell. “Can humans and mushrooms really be collaborators? Might all knowledge, then, require collaboration? If so, what might we gain by making these necessary collaborations