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View a physical anthropologist at work in the field of forensic anthropology.
See and hear about the important work anthropologists perform in economic
and social development around the work with an anthropologist employed
by the USAID.
Listen to an anthropologist and the work she does for a large Fortune
500 corporation in the private section.
An Essay on Careers
by Author Gary Ferraro with Video Highlights
ANTHROPOLOGY AND JOBS
With Video Highlights from Anthropologists at Work: Careers Making a Difference
By Gary Ferraro
With the costs of college education continuing to skyrocket, more and
more parents are asking their college-aged children some very practical
questions. For example, parents want to know why their children are majoring
in anthropology. Behind such a question is the more pragmatic question:
What kind of job can you get with a B.A. in anthropology?
It is important to bear in mind that a B.A. in cultural anthropology-as
in most other undergraduate fields of study-is a liberal arts degree,
not some type of professional certification. In other words, an undergraduate
degree in anthropology does not prepare a person to become a professional
research anthropologist any more than an undergraduate degree in political
science equips a person to achieve high political office. The B.A. in
anthropology does provide excellent background for graduate study in anthropology
at the Ph.D. level, which is the normal route to becoming a professional
anthropologist.
For those not interested in pursuing a career as an anthropologist, the
B.A. in anthropology provides valuable skills and insights that can be
relevant for a wide variety of other professions. Because cultural anthropology
involves the study of human behavior in whatever form it may take, a B.A.
in anthropology can be useful for any job that requires an understanding
of human cultural behavior. However, such a general statement is of little
use to the recent college graduate who is pounding the pavement in search
of employment. The term anthropologist or cross-cultural expert is not
a standard job Classification in the employment section of a newspaper's
classified ads. In recent decades, however, a number of jobs in both government
and industry have developed that focus on certain cross-cultural issues
and involve working with people from different cultural and subcultural
backgrounds. These jobs might include program director, consultant, planner,
market analyst, housing administrator, cross-cultural trainer, social
worker, survey researcher, or coordinator of refugee services. Many of
the case studies appearing in the Applied Perspective sections of this
text illustrate how anthropological skills have been applied to a number
of different professional areas. For example, case studies showed how
anthropological skills and insights have been used to help architects
design appropriate housing for subcultural groups, develop a highly successful
reforestation program in Haiti, shed light on the public health aspects
of the AIDS epidemic, and provide courts with culturally relevant information
for the resolution of legal cases, to mention but a few applications.
As mentioned in Chapter 3, the prevalence of applied anthropology within
the discipline has increased in recent decades, most notably during the
1970s and 1980s. Because of a shrinking academic job market, coupled with
federal legislation requiring environmental impact studies and historical
preservation, more professionally trained anthropologists are employed
in nonacademic positions than in colleges and universities. As more and
more Ph.D.-level anthropologists are making their way into nonacademic
jobs, employment opportunities for those with less than Ph.D. training
in anthropology are also increasing. Today people with training in cultural
anthropology are putting their observational and analytical skiffs to
work in a variety of ways in both the public (government) and private
(business) sectors of the economy.
Opportunities for employment with the U.S. federal government are wide
ranging. In the area of international development, an increasing number
of jobs are opening up for people who understand cross-cultural behavior.
Such organizations as the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
and the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)-organizations
that administer foreign aid-hire people trained in anthropology to provide
the background needed to implement certain programs of planned change
successfully, such as programs for family planning, agricultural development,
educational reform, and disease prevention. As many development agencies
throughout the world have learned the hard way, the most well-intentioned
programs of planned change can have disastrous results unless something
is known about the cultures of the target populations. Before spending
(in some cases) minions of dollars on development programs, such organizations
as CIDA and USAID want to have as much relevant information as possible
about the local cultures.
Anthropological skills are valuable for various types of government work
abroad, but at least as many cultural anthropologists are working for
various branches of government (federal, state, and municipal) at home.
Because North America, contrary to popular myth, is not a perfect melting
pot, a good deal of ethnic diversity can be found there. As long as substantial
cultural differences exist, there will be a need for anthropological skills
and insights to help bureaucrats work effectively with all cultural subgroups.
Because anthropology deals with understanding cultural differences, and
because governments are in the business of providing services for all
people, there should be a considerable overlap of interests between cultural
anthropologists and government bureaucrats. To illustrate, people with
anthropological training have worked in government positions at home in
the following areas: aging, criminal justice, cultural resource management,
disaster assistance, education, family planning, human and civil rights,
information systems, medical care, museums, nutrition, program evaluation,
public housing, public relations and communications, refugee settlement,
research grant writing, social impact analysis, substance abuse, urban
planning, and welfare policy. Although this list is hardly definitive,
it does give a general idea of the scope of jobs related to training in
anthropology.
Today a growing number of students of anthropology are finding their way
into new and exciting areas of employment, particularly in the private
sector of the economy. The following is a sample of recent employment
experiences in the world of business by those with training in anthropology:
Steven Barnett was hired by an advertising agency in charge of creating
an ad campaign for the Sylvester Stallone movie Rambo III. Barnett conducted
ethnographic research on how a cross section of U.S. theatergoers viewed
Rambo. Barnetts findings that Rambo was viewed almost as a comic book
hero resulted in an ad campaign that played down ". . . the cold
war politics and played up Rambo as a larger-than-life cultural icon.'
(Heller 1988:A-24)
After conducting an ethnographic study on two-way pagers in rural China
(where there is a shortage of telephones), Motorola decided to start marketing
its pagers for vigorously for the rural China market. According to Jean
Canavan, an anthropologist for Motorola, "If we want to develop technologies
that really fit into the way people live their day-to-day lives, then
we have to understand how people really live." (Hafner, 1999.)
Lucy Suchman, working as a researcher for Xerox, makes anthropological
observations of airport workers to learn how they keep track of people,
airplanes, luggage, and air freight. Xerox hopes to use these findings
to help improve its handling of documents, design more user-friendly equipment,
and improve its instruction manuals. (Deutsch 1991:C- 11)
Allison Cohen, described as a marketing ethnographer, conducts firsthand
research into people's kitchen cabinets, refrigerators, and medicine cabinets
to determine their buying patterns. Rather than using mailed questionnaires,
as has been the case in more traditional marketing research, people like
Cohen are hired by marketing firms to observe U.S. consumer behavior in
its natural context. Advertising agencies are willing to hire these "Margaret
Meads of marketing~'because they feel they will be able to develop more
effective ad campaigns if they first know something about what is being
bought and why. (Miller, Shenitz, and Rosado 1990:59-60)
Lorna McDougall, an employee at Arthur Andersees Center for Professional
Education, uses anthropological data-gathering techniques to study why
some people learn more effectively through the lecture method and others
learn better through more interactive methods. The findings from this
research will enable the instructors at the center to use the most effective
teaching techniques in their corporate training. (Deutsch 1991:C- 11)
Some North American companies are interested in hiring those trained in
cultural anthropology to collect relevant information on their culturally
diverse workforces as a way of minimizing conflicts between the corporate
culture and the cultures of the workers. Moreover, companies that are
manufacturing, marketing, or negotiating abroad need help from anthropologically
trained people when working in culturally unfamiliar waters. As a way
of addressing these needs, an increasing number of cultural anthropologists
are becoming cross-cultural trainers for organizations that send people
abroad or have multicultural workforces at home. By conducting a search
for "cross cultural training" on the Internet, you will find
numerous companies that provide culture specific training. Many of these
training firms either employ anthropologists as cross cultural experts
or are using comparative cultural data that have been collected by anthropologists.
The preceding discussion has attempted to provide some idea as to how
those with training in anthropology can fit into the world of work. As
Van Willigen reminds us, "the (job) market is not very much aware
of anthropologists as such" (1993:223). In the final analysis, each
student is responsible for carving out a spot in the job market for her
or himself. In other words, because no jobs in the nonacademic world are
exclusively for cultural anthropologists, it is important for the graduate
in cultural anthropology to prepare for the job search by gaining an understanding
of the organization offering the job as well as a clear appreciation of
what he or she brings to the job situation. Anthropology graduates are
better equipped in certain areas than are those graduating with any other
liberal arts degree. First, anthropology graduates are well acquainted
with cross-cultural differences and similarities, an area of expertise
of particular importance in a multicultural society such as our own. This
involves the ability to "size up" unfamiliar social and professional
situations, appreciate the wide range of cultural behavior in the world,
and learn how to behave toward people from other cultures with sensitivity,
flexibility, and understanding. Second, training in anthropology instills
such qualities as interviewing skills, experience with survey research,
observational acuity, and a holistic perspective. Third, anthropology
graduates should have other skills and assets that can be useful to potential
employers, such as experience with statistical methods, computer skills,
foreign language fluency, and communication skills. Once students have
a clear understanding of their skills, they are in a good position to
tailor their resumes to a particular job opening.
For an excellent visual introduction to the topic of anthropology and
jobs, ask your professor to show the video Anthropologists at Work: Careers
Making a Difference, produced by the National Association of Practicing
Anthropologists (NAPA) and distributed by these American Anthropological
Association (AAA).
Here are three video clips from Anthropologists at Work illustrating the
wide range of exiciting and important work done by anthropologists around
the world.

All video clips are the courtesy of the American Anthropological Association.
Anthropologists at Work: Careers Making a Difference is An Expose Communications
Production: directed by Gheri Arnold.
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