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The good-enough science-and-politics of anthropological collaboration with evidence-based clinical research: Four ethnographic case studies

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  • Messac, Luke
  • Ciccarone, Dan
  • Draine, Jeffrey
  • Bourgois, Philippe

Abstract

The apolitical legitimacy of “evidence-based medicine” offers a practical means for ethnography and critical social-science-and-humanities-of-health theory to transfer survival resources to structurally vulnerable populations and to engage policy and services audiences with urgent political problems imposed on the urban poor in the United States that harm health: most notably, homelessness, hyperincarceration, social service cut-backs and the War on Drugs. We present four examples of collaborations between ethnography and clinical research projects that demonstrate the potentials and limits of promoting institutional reform, political debate and action through distinct strategies of cross-methodological dialog with epidemiological and clinical services research. Ethnographic methods alone, however, are simply a technocratic add-on. They must be informed by critical theory to contribute effectively and transformatively to applied health initiatives. Ironically, technocratic, neoliberal logics of cost-effectiveness can sometimes render radical service and policy reform initiatives institutionally credible, fundable and capable of generating wider political support, even though the rhetoric of economic efficacy is a double-edged sword. To extend the impact of ethnography and interdisciplinary theories of political-economic, cultural and disciplinary power relations into applied clinical and public health research, anthropologists – and their fellow travelers – have to be able to strategically, but respectfully learn to see through the positivist logics of clinical services research as well as epidemiological epistemology in order to help clinicians achieve – and extend – their applied priorities. In retrospect, these four very differently-structured collaborations suggest the potential for "good-enough” humble scientific and political strategies to work for, and with, structurally vulnerable populations in a punitive neoliberal era of rising social inequality, cutbacks of survival services, and hyperincarceration of the poor.

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  • Messac, Luke & Ciccarone, Dan & Draine, Jeffrey & Bourgois, Philippe, 2013. "The good-enough science-and-politics of anthropological collaboration with evidence-based clinical research: Four ethnographic case studies," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 99(C), pages 176-186.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:99:y:2013:i:c:p:176-186
    DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.04.009
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Rhodes, Tim & Singer, Merrill & Bourgois, Philippe & Friedman, Samuel R. & Strathdee, Steffanie A., 2005. "The social structural production of HIV risk among injecting drug users," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 61(5), pages 1026-1044, September.
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    5. Joseph Friedman & George Karandinos & Laurie Kain Hart & Fernando Montero Castrillo & Nicholas Graetz & Philippe Bourgois, 2019. "Structural vulnerability to narcotics-driven firearm violence: An ethnographic and epidemiological study of Philadelphia’s Puerto Rican inner-city," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(11), pages 1-25, November.
    6. Sochas, Laura, 2021. "Challenging categorical thinking: A mixed methods approach to explaining health inequalities," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 283(C).
    7. Mars, Sarah G. & Fessel, Jason N. & Bourgois, Philippe & Montero, Fernando & Karandinos, George & Ciccarone, Daniel, 2015. "Heroin-related overdose: The unexplored influences of markets, marketing and source-types in the United States," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 140(C), pages 44-53.

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