Copyright © 2010 Jaimes Nel

In a recent blog post, Nokia’s Jan Chipchase raises the issue of “tour bus ethnography” - short, sharp excursions into foreign cultures, with little time to decompress before moving on to the next one.
Image: A snapshot of today in Western European (liberal media!) culture.
In this post he deals primarily with some of his techniques for managing life on the road, through a kind of “mental scaffolding” for comprehending where you are (taking photos of local papers) and managing data through a very specific process and dedicated person.
The post seems to implicitly raise other issues though. He notes that in a 100 interview tour of the States, the first 4/5 days produce the most valuable insights. This is the pragmatic side of the argument. Get in, get out, keep moving. You never know the truth anyway so what counts is having a clear idea of where “truths” came from. The scaffolding is what counts, not the detail.
The other side is that the tour bus is like a moving armchair, carrying our 19th century study with all it’s preconceptions with us. Admittedly it’s a different set of preconceptions that I’m talking about here.
Somewhere in the middle lies a compromise. In the end, it hinges on the framing of ‘the field’. Concerned exclusively with the field inhabited by users of general practitioners in a particular town, your terms of reference hinge on that town and more depth is desirable. The issues are local and therefore specific, and time may be required to uncover them. If your frame of reference swings to the wider issues of medical services infrastructure, then looking at ‘instances’ of GP use can be enlightening, alongside ‘instances’ from other aspects of that eco-system. Within this eco-system perspective, it can feel like an unrealistic luxury to spend too much time in a single instance.
There’s something of Sennett’s critique of potential man in this debate. And something of a nostalgia for when the world was seen simply enough to spend a year mythologising remote cultures.
Here in the thick of it, Chipchase’s scaffolding techniques and images of traffic flows, feel like the reality of the never more global world that we inhabit and it’s perhaps a different, rather than inauthentic anthropology.

Joseph Stiglitz argues in The Nation that the current US financial bailout is designed to rescue Wall Street and ill-designed to rescue the economy.
He says that the US (and by extension global) financial system is suffering from 4 problems:
He argues that the plan as it has now passed the US Congress addresses only the first issue ( and at cost to the State, not the banks). This is a simple argument about designing things the right way first time round. It’s also an implicit argument that that’s not even being attempted because this is a bail-out of Wall Street, with little regard for the impact to taxpayers and the incoming administration.
Image by Duncan Hull