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Millie

Calling previous attendees of Ethno Bahia/Ethno Brazil!

September 16, 2020 by Millie 2 Comments

Convocatória para antigos participantes do Ethno Bahia e do Ethno Brasil! Estamos à procura da tua ajuda na nossa mais recente convocatória para participantes.

Os nossos investigadores gostariam de falar com todos os que alguma vez foram participantes do Ethno no Brasil, seja o Ethno Brasil ou o Ethno Bahia. Podes falar connosco em Português, se preferires! Estamos interessados nas tuas reflexões, histórias e experiências do Ethno e adoraríamos ter uma entrevista online contigo de cerca de 10-15 minutos. As entrevistas serão realizadas entre Outubro e Dezembro de 2020.

Para participares envia um email para ryan.humphrey@yorksj.ac.uk. Obrigado!

Se quiseres saber mais informações sobre a participação neste projeto de investigação, vê a nossa convocatória geral para participantes.

———————–

Calling previous attendees at Ethno Bahia and Ethno Brazil! We’re seeking your help in our latest call for research participants.

Our researchers would like to connect with anybody who has ever been an Ethno participant in Brazil, whether at Ethno Brazil or Ethno Bahia. You can speak to us in Portuguese, if you’d prefer to!

We’re interested in your reflections, stories and experiences of Ethno, and would love to have a 10 to 15-minute online interview with you. Interviews will be taking place between October and December 2020.

To get involved, send an email to ryan.humphrey@yorksj.ac.uk. Thank you!

If you’d like some more information about taking part in this research, see our general call for participants.

Image: Elzinha de Abreu

News Participant info Ethno Bahia Ethno Brazil research participants

Were you a participant at Ethno Estonia in 2010 or earlier?

September 9, 2020 by Millie Leave a Comment

Latest call for research participants! Did you attend Ethno Estonia in 2010 or earlier?

Ethno Research is investigating the impact that Ethno has had since its inception 30 years ago. Our researchers are trying to connect with people who participated in Ethno between 1990-2010, and are currently looking to speak with participants of the Ethno Estonia camps during that time.

We would like to hear reflections, stories and experiences of as many participants as possible, through short (10-15 minute) digital interviews set to happen between September and November 2020. If this applies to you and you are interested in being involved then we would love to hear from you!

Please email Ryan Humphrey (Ethno Research History Coordinator) at ryan.humphrey@yorksj.ac.uk.

If you’d like some more information about taking part in this research, see our general call for participants.

Image: Lisandra Roosioja.

______________________________

Eesti Etno endised osalejad! Veel üks üleskutse uurimusse osalejate leidmiseks… Kas võtsid osa Eesti Etnost aastal 2010 või enne seda?

Meie uurijad püüavad leida inimesi, kes osalesid Eesti Etno laagrites 1990-2010 aastatel!

Me loodame kuulda sinu mõtteid, lugusid ja kogemusi läbi lühikeste (10-15 minutit) digitaalselt toimuvate intervjuude, mis leiavad aset järgmise paari kuu jooksul. Võid meiega rääkida eesti keeles, kui see on su eelistus! Loodame sinust õige pea kuulda. 

Palun kirjuta ryan.humphrey@yorksj.ac.uk. 
Kui soovid rohkem teavet, kuidas uurimusest osa võtta, vaata meie üldist üleskutset osalejatele: 
https://www.ethnoresearch.org/we-are-seeking-research-participants/

News Participant info Estonia Ethno Estonia research participants

Were you a participant at Ethno Sweden in 1990-2010?

September 2, 2020 by Millie Leave a Comment

Latest call for research participants! Did you attend Ethno Sweden in 2010 or earlier?

Ethno Research is investigating the impact that Ethno has had since its inception 30 years ago. Our researchers are trying to connect with people who participated in Ethno between 1990-2010, and are currently looking to speak with participants of the Ethno Sweden camps during that time.

We would like to hear reflections, stories and experiences of as many participants as possible, through short (10-15 minute) digital interviews set to happen between September and November 2020. If this applies to you and you are interested in being involved then we would love to hear from you!

Please email Ryan Humphrey (Ethno Research History Coordinator) at ryan.humphrey@yorksj.ac.uk.

If you’d like some more information about taking part in this research, see our general call for participants.

News Participant info Ethno Sweden research participants Sweden

We are seeking research participants

June 19, 2020 by Millie 2 Comments

Ethno Research is a three-year project (2019-2021) investigating the impact Ethno has had since its inception 30 years ago. In order to answer our overarching questions (outlined below this call) we want to interview a wide range of people who have been engaged in activities connected to the Ethno-World. If you fit into any of the categories below, or feel you have something to share relating to these questions, we welcome your insights.

Our researchers are working in distinct teams to explore a number of different themes, and it may be that your experiences and insights are of interest to more than one team. With this in mind, please don’t be surprised if you are contacted more than once by us – we may have new questions to ask! You can let us know if you’d prefer not to be contacted again. Please take a look at the Ethno Research Privacy Statement to find out how we will look after your personal data.  

Who are we speaking to?

Currently, we are specifically seeking to interview people who:

  1. Attended an Ethno camp between 1990 and 2010. If you attended a camp prior to 2010, our team exploring the history of Ethno and its impact on participants would be keen to speak with you. We will be arranging interviews with this group between now and November 2020, specifically targeting Artistic Leaders around August/September. Please get in touch as soon as you can if you fit this description.
  2. Speak Spanish or Portuguese as a first language. Our team exploring the history of Ethno would be keen to speak with you, too!
  3. Are an Ethno Organizer. As an organiser, you will have a unique insight into Ethno, and our researchers are very keen to speak with you. We are already in touch with most current organisers, so you can expect to hear from one or more of our team in the coming months, especially in August, September and October 2020, and in early 2021. Thank you for all you have done for the research already!

If you fall into one of the above categories and would be happy for a researcher to interview you via online video call, please send us an e-mail with brief details about your connection to Ethno. You will then be asked to complete an ethical consent form before arranging an interview.

E-mail: m.rawmackenzie@yorksj.ac.uk

Millie Raw Mackenzie, Ethno Research Project Coordinator

Further information

What is the purpose of our investigation?

The purpose of Ethno Research is to explore the hypothesis that Ethno music camps provide transformational sociocultural and musical significances for those that engage in its activities. Against a framework through which the phenomenon of Ethno-World can be historically and contemporary understood, three distinct lines of enquiry guide us: (1) pedagogy and professional development, (2) experience, and (3) reverberations. Seeking to inform those with responsibilities for Ethno-World and, more broadly, cultural policy decision makers, community development leaders, music educators, potential funding organisations, and aspiring musicians, Ethno Research will respond to three overarching questions: In what ways can the growth and development of Ethno-World be understood as an historical socio-cultural phenomenon? What are Ethno-World’s stated and unstated tenets and to what extent are these enacted in its activities? What is the nature and significance of the Ethno experience for participants and non-participants?

Interviews

We would expect the interviews to be between 10-45 mins depending on available time. To ensure reliability we may ask you to check transcriptions of your interviews. This will involve reading it through to make sure the researcher has captured what you said accurately. We are currently arranging interviews via online video call.

Ethno Evaluation

We are aware that an evaluation of the Ethno programme has taken place over the past year, and that a number of people will have been contacted to answer questions about their experience of Ethno camps. We wish to clarify that this evaluation was not part of Ethno Research, the 3-year research project conducted by the ICCM (based at York St John University), of which this call for participants is a part. That evaluation was conducted by an external evaluator contracted by JM International, and is separate to the research. A list of our researchers is given below, so you can be sure you are being contacted by a member of our team.

Our research team

Catherine Birch
Dr. Dave Camlin
Ana Čorić
Professor Andrea Creech
Alex Crowton
Linus Ellström
Dr. Jo Gibson
Dr. Sarah-Jane Gibson
Professor Lee Higgins
Jason Li
Keegan Manson-Curry
Professor Roger Mantie
Helena Reis
Lisandra Roosioja
Dr. Laura Risk
Dr. Maria Varvarigou

Project Coordinator – Millie Raw Mackenzie
History Coordinator – Ryan Humphrey

Participant info Ethno research participants

Reimagining Ethno Research in 2020

June 10, 2020 by Millie Leave a Comment

Over the last few months, a new reimagined plan for the Ethno Research project has taken shape. With global disruption from the Covid-19 pandemic, including substantial restrictions on travel, we’ve adapted our plans to focus on a set of projects which can be undertaken with limited travel in the coming year. We hope some fieldwork can continue in year 3 of the project (2021), if circumstances allow it!

We’re delighted that a number of new researchers have been brought onto the project this year:

Dr. Dave Camlin (UK)
Professor Andrea Creech (Université Laval, Canada)
Dr. Maria Varvarigou (Mary Immaculate College, Limerick, Ireland)

In collaboration with our existing team of co-investigators and research associates, they will be working on a series of projects, or ‘work packages’, which each take a different focus within the research. The three core work packages the team are embarking on include the history of Ethno; Pedagogy and Professional Development; and Arts and Culture.

The research team have been keeping in touch via regular Zoom meetings, and a full company meeting was held on 20th May, where we updated the whole team on the progress of each work package, and smaller teams working on each one met in break-out spaces. Each meeting has been a welcome opportunity to touch base and nurture a shared vision for the research.

Throughout April and May, our researchers have been conducting online interviews with previous participants of Ethno camps. 36 interviews have been conducted, contributing to the ‘history’ work package which looks at participants’ experiences since the first camp in 1990. The idea is for individual narratives and chronological data to be housed within a web-based timeline, and we hope to be able to share this on our website soon.

More recently, we have published the white paper report Framing Ethno-World: Intercultural Music Exchange, Tradition, and Globalization. This report acts as a conceptual framework for the research and can now be viewed and downloaded from our website.

Alongside the three main work packages described above, a discrete project using SenseMaker software will trial a new method for data collection, while sub-themes including sustainability, consent and trauma-informed practice, ethno on the road, and the Global South, will also be explored by the team. We’ll be on the look-out for research participants over the coming year, so if you feel you have a story to share that could benefit our research, look out for our posts on social media and this website, or just get in touch!

News Quarterly round-up Ethno online

Framing Ethno-World

June 10, 2020 by Millie Leave a Comment

Intercultural Music Exchange, Tradition, and Globalization

Ethno Research is pleased to be able to share its newest publication, a white paper report intended to serve as a conceptual framework to advance the research agenda for Ethno Research’s comprehensive study of the Ethno program.

Framing Ethno-World: Intercultural Music Exchange, Tradition, and Globalization was generated on the basis of a literature review and critical analysis informed by publicly-oriented descriptions of JM International’s Ethno program; issues discussed in extant research literature; deliberations at Ethno Research meetings in 2019; the seven pilot case studies released in January 2020; and the experiences of the authors, having attended Ethno France in February 2020.

The white paper report is available in two versions: the full report (25,000 words) and a condensed version of the report (5,000 words). They can also be found in the Publications section of this website.

News conceptual framework Ethno ethno-world globalisation intercultural music exchange publication Research

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