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Evaluation

The suitability of the data for supporting future research will be evaluated in two ways. First using internal tests; estimates of demographic measures will be prepared using different subsets (critically between the archival sources and the results of the two village censuses undertaken by myself). Such comparisons will establish the extent to which a model of the population derived from the archival data approaches one based on the census data, and which parts of the model are more or less robust.

Secondly, some new pilot data will be collected in the course of a separate research project, funded by The British Academy, the Nuffield Foundation and the University of Kent Social Science Faculty Research Board in July 1997. While in the field a small set of well-understood health-related data will be collected with the express aim of using it to test the main data being processed in this project.

The basic schedule will ask respondents who they first go to for advice in response to illness (their own or a family member, or neighbours). The results will be sensitive, among other factors, to the age of the respondents and whether they were born in the village. The results will reveal connections between density of kinship network and responses to illness. Existing ethnographic data already allows the basic patterns of response to be predicted with respect to population structure. The model and the census data-based accounts of population structure can then be evaluated by the extent to which they predict the distribution of the independently-collected pilot data.

References

Caldwell, J.C. & P. Caldwell. 1990. High fertility in sub-saharan africa. Scientific American 262 (5), 118-125.

Caldwell, J. C. 1994. Fertility in sub-saharan Africa - status and prospects. Population And Development Review 20 (1), 179-187.

Caldwell, J. C., Caldwell, P. & Quiggin, P. 1989. The social-context of aids in sub-saharan Africa. Population And Development Review 15 (2), 185-234.

Das Gupta, M. 1988. The use of Genealogies for Reconstructing Social History and Analysing Fertility Behaviour in a North Indian Village. In Micro-Approaches to Demographic Research (eds.) J. C. Caldwell, A. G. Hill & V. J. Hull. London: Kegan Paul International.

Dyke, B. & Morrill, W. T. (eds.) 1980. Genealogical demography . London: Academic Press.

Fetter, B. (ed.) 1990. Demography from Scanty Evidence: Central Africa in the Colonial Era . Boulder and London: Lynne Rienner Publishers.

Hurault, J. M. 1969 &1970. Eleveurs et Cultivateurs des Hauts Plateaux du Cameroun: la Population du Lamidat de Banyo. Population 24 (5), 963-994 and 25.5:1039-1084.

Nygaard, L. 1992. Name standardization in record linkage: an improved alogorithmic strategy. History and Computing 4 (2) , 63-74.

Psion, G., & Langarey, A. 1988. Age Patterns of Mortality in Eastern Senegal: a Comparison of Micro and Survey Approaches. In Micro-Approaches to Demographic Research (eds.) J. C. Caldwell, A. G. Hill & V. J. Hull. London: Kegan Paul International.

Smith, J. E. & Oeppen, J. 1993. Estimating Numbers of Kin in Historical England Using Demographic Microsimulation. In Old and New Methods in Historical Demography (eds.) D. S. Reher & R. S. Schofield. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Thornton, J. 1977. An eighteenth Century Baptismal Register and the Demographic History of Manguenzo. In African Historical Demography (eds) C. Fyfe & D. McMaster. Edinburgh: Centre of African Studies, University of Edinburgh.

van de Walle, E., G. Pison & M. Sala-Diakanda (eds) 1992. Mortality and Society in Sub-Saharan Africa (International Studies in Demography). Oxford: Clarendon Press.



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We have no funding stream for this site, and so little time to maintain older material so it well may have a bit of a museum effect. Newer material will be appropriately wizzy.


What is the Ethnographics Gallery?

The Ethnographics Gallery is a publication of the Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing. This site contains reports on CSAC research, Teaching materials, and Resources that can be used for planning and executing research, including bibliographic materials, databases of ethnographic material, fieldnotes, descriptors, and software for working with ethnographic data. Suggestions always welcome, but we have no funding stream for this website. It contains materials created since 1986, and many of them are rather unfashionable by today's standards. We do, however, want everything to work! mail suggestions to csac@kent.ac.uk

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History

Our first internet service was begun in November, 1986, followed by our first web site in May, 1993, one of the first 400 web sites. The Ethnographics Gallery was founded in Feburary 1994. Our mission at that time was to provide a forum for anthropologists on the internet, and we helped to launch a number of organisations into cyberspace. Today, we are mostly concerned with novel forms of online publishing, disseminating our research, promoting learning resources, and disseminating information about using computers in anthropological research.

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