Making Social Science Research Relevant

I recently attended the Applied Anthropology meeting in Baltimore, MD. Surrounded by a colorful collection of scholars, activists, practitioners, policy makers, and researchers within academia but also those who have found their calling in the private sectors or NGOs (whether through preference or frankly lack of jobs in academia), the mantras of making anthropology accessible to a broader public on the one hand as well as enacting policy change through research results on the other, ran deep. This could be said for many a discipline where the wish for scholars to reach a larger audience is a common theme yet it is faced with so many challenges. I should note that I make the distinction here between informing an audience with the intent purpose of enabling change (in perspectives, policies, or priorities) and the “general reader”, a type of potentially lucrative yet high risk nebulous readership that sends many salivating publishers (unfortunately with university presses often leading the charge) hurtling over the cliffs of trade publishing to splatter down below on the rocks of high returns and watery scholarship. Continue reading “Making Social Science Research Relevant”

Welcome to the Berghahn Books Blog!

The year 2012 marks a number of exciting milestones for Berghahn Books. Not only do we enter our 18th year since Marion published our first two books in 1994 (Uniting Germany and Imperial Germany), but we also started the year with a much-anticipated move for our New York offices from lower Manhattan across the East river to DUMBO, Brooklyn.  We’re now well settled in – just a few final walls to paint and then there’s that minor plumbing issue with the kitchenette sink….but we’re otherwise enjoying the gentle rumble of the trains crossing the Manhattan bridge and lunch breaks on the waterfront next to the carousel. Continue reading “Welcome to the Berghahn Books Blog!”