Realizing the AnthroSource Vision
The Committee on the Future of Print and Electronic Publication (CFPEP) is launching this AAA community web site to seek advice, contributions and feedback from members regarding developing and expanding AnthroSource to include resources and services that are of value to the membership and that promote and advance anthropology. AnthroSource began as a vision for a platform for online communications and services for the AAA membership. In 2006, the AnthroSource Steering Group and AnthroSource Working Group merged into the CFPEP, which makes recommendations to the Committee on Scientific Publications regarding AAA publications and other internet services. AnthroSource has initially focussed on the online transition of AAA publishing. In the midst of the benefits and problems that have been borne of this effort, a larger vision has been in the background. CFPEP is exploring how we can realize the larger vision of AnthroSource now that the Association association has completed initial arrangements with Wiley-Blackwell regarding our online journal publications. We need to consider more generally what could be useful for improving teaching and research, promoting our services discipline to the community, and working through the many ethical issues that will arise. Our teaching and research are supported by information exchanged and made available online on the WWW. Web services, such as Google's shared editing and spreadsheet applications, are platforms for collaborative research. YouTube is a source for of video for teaching and a stage to extend our own reach. Our students and younger staff interact casually and professionally on social platforms such as FaceBook and MySpace. Blogs are used to supplement teaching, discuss research findings and disseminate research as it progresses. Anthropologists are studying and participating in new forms of social, cultural and transcultural interaction on the internet. Some possibilities for an expanded role for AnthroSource include:- Repositories for non-journal publications
- Specialized archival repositories for ethnographic media and fieldnotes with secure access
- Social spaces like FaceBook for anthropologists
- Collabatories: formal meeting and working places for collaboration in small or larger groups
- Indexes of online applications and tools for data annotation, management, sharing, analysis and presentation
- Workshops and podcasts covering topical themes, methods and instruction
- Co-ops to deliver specialist and general teaching online on a fee basis
- Online seminars
- Resource guides documenting and organising organizing the existing anthropological web content of the web
- How to enable AAA sections to create content, with technical assistance from the Association association as necessary.
- A vast array of ethical issues arisingEthical concerns involving the including presentation of data, meeting the requirements of funding sources, and enabling public, commercial and governmental access to anthropological material.
- How to fund AnthroSource; different components could be funded as, in full or in part, through membership benefits, sponsorship, advertising, shareware or and subscriptions fees.
Version 2.1 last modified by Mike Fischer on 03/03/2008 at 05:07
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