Volume 5(2)
International Journal of
Business Anthropology
Table of Contents
Editorial Commentary
Corporate Ethnography and Clinical Research: Thinking a Case Study of Software Evaluation
Pedro Oliveira
Effects of Religiosity on Apparel Shopping Orientation: An Exploratory Study
Lizhu Davis and Tun-Min (Catherine) Jai
The Bitter Fruit of Power. An Ethnographic Study of Corporate Compliance
Davide Torsello
Guanxi in Relationship Marketing of China’s Foreign Banks: A Marketing Research to Echo Business Anthropology
Adolphus Yee-Yin Wan and Marco Pui-Lam Ip
A Brief History of American Indian Business
Charles Harrington
Performance Indicators for Training Module Curriculum of Long Term Care
Hsiang-Ping Wang and Liang-Ju Chen
Teddy Bear: The Dearest, Nearest, and Scariest
Qing He
Robert
Dean, Advanced Research College of Applied Anthropology
Jishou University, Jishou City, Hunan Province,China
Chair of the International Conference on Business Anthropology
http://chinaismyhomecountry.blogspot.com/
Dr. Robert Guang Tian
We have helped hundreds of scholars published their articles in peer-reviewed referral academic journals listed with Cabell's Directory. We also have helped scholars published their book manuscrips. Editor, International Journal of Business AnthropologyEditor, International Journal of China MarketingEditor, Modern China Series
Please visit my blog: http://businessanthropology.blogspot.com/
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On Mon, 11/10/14, David Sless <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Subject: Re: What is evidence in design and design research?
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: Monday, November 10, 2014, 11:22 AM
Hi All,
I’m with Garry, at least part of the way.
I find the disconnect between this thread and design
practice profound, breathtaking in its lack of relevance
outside academic debates of some 50 years ago, and
profoundly depressing. I’m not sure the term
“incommensurate” covers it, but it’s the one that
comes most readily to mind. Perhaps I need another brandy!
With so many assumptions floating around about the nature of
“evidence”, and all the clever and smart arguments that
can be used to defend or deflate a particular points of view
on the subject, it might be useful to ask practitioners why
they used the term, in what context, and how they do useful
work that involves the term “evidence”.
All the rest seems to me like posturing.
David
--
blog: http://communication.org.au/blog/ <http://communication.org.au/blog/>
web: http://communication.org.au <http://communication.org.au/>
Professor David Sless BA MSc FRSA
CEO • Communication Research Institute •
• helping people communicate with people •
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