Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh/Events and Workshops/Anthropology and Global Health editathon
'Anthropology and Global Health edit-a-thon' in a nutshell:
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Booking
editTo be assured of your place at the event, please contact Felix Stein at [email protected] or Elliott Oakley ([email protected])
About the event
editWikipedia - while being very widely read - is not necessarily a great resource for the topics of Anthropology or Global Health. We would like to change this, so we have organised a Wikipedia edit-a-thon for both fields of study. In this session the University's Information Services team will teach us how Wikipedia works, how you we edit it, and how we might potentially incorporate editing it into future teaching or outreach work.
If you attend, please think about a topic that you would like to edit during the session (maybe something that offsets Wikipedia’s current gender bias?). If you are really keen, please do feel free to bring a book or an article that you would like to work into Wikipedia.
How do I prepare?
edit- Sign up for the event by contacting Felix Stein ([email protected]) or Elliott Oakley ([email protected])
- Create a Wikipedia account
- Bring a laptop (wi-fi will be provided)
- Learn about editing if you like: Tutorial, or Getting started on Wikipedia for more information
- Think about what you would like to edit - maybe prepare some materials to bring with you on the day
The Manual of Style
editWikipedia has help pages which set out style guidelines for pages being created on certain subject areas. Please have a look at the following pages:
Programme
edit- 1:00pm - 1:15pm: Housekeeping and Welcome
- 1:15pm – 2:30pm: Wikipedia editing training.
- 2:30pm – 2:40pm: Comfort break.
- 2:40pm - 4:00pm: Research and edit.
- 4:00pm - 4:15pm: Transferring drafted text to Wikipedia's live space.
- 4:15pm Close.
Trainers
editEwan McAndrew, Wikimedian in Residence at the University of Edinburgh
Hit list of articles to be created or improved
editHelpful updates could be as simple as: Making sure reference links are still appropriate and functional; Adding new inline citations/references; Adding a photo; Adding an infobox; Adding data to more fields in an existing infobox; Creating headings; Adding categories; etc.
The following is a small sample of topics to work on. Feel free to come up with your own ideas!
Looking for ideas
editAnthropology:
- Expanding this List of Women Anthropologists, or any of the associated entries
- Foregrounding the women’s contribution in this History of Anthropology
- Expanding this entry on Social Anthropology
Global health:
- Expanding the history section of this entry on Global Health
- Expanding entries on the DALY
- Creating entries on famous female global health scholars & their works
Further resources:
Sources
edit- Wikipedia is a tertiary resource, which relies upon secondary sources. Wikipedia is not a place for original research.
- For more guidance on the use of sources, see this guide here.
- Editors will also have access to some University of Edinburgh e-resources.
- Search for articles on Google Scholar
- Try the Wikipedia Library's list of free resources
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- The Hathi Trust Digital Library - 100s of novels & other assorted texts
- Shareable Images can be found through a Creative Commons search(which includes Google, Flickr & Wikicommons in its search).
- Images from Edinburgh University's collections - http://images.is.ed.ac.uk/
Suggested sources:
editGeneral
edit- DiscoverEd to find books, ebooks, journals, ejournals and more.
News sources
editTheses databases
edit- Edinburgh Research Archive. For theses produced at the University of Edinburgh Edinburgh Research Archive
- Proquest Dissertations
- More at: Edinburgh University Library - Theses database
Outcomes
editNew pages created
edit- Olivia Harris - British social anthropologist whose work focused on the study of the Bolivian Highlands. Her writing includes analyses of fertility, gender, money, conceptions of work and of time, the relation between law and custom, as well as the Inca and Spanish colonisation of current-day Bolivia.
- Mohalla Clinics - primary health centres in the state of New Delhi in India, that offer a basic package of essential health services including medicines, diagnostics, and consultation free of cost. Mohalla in Hindi means neighborhood or community. These clinics serve as the first point of contact for the population, offer timely services, and reduce the load of referrals to secondary and tertiary health facilities in the state.
- Joanna Overing - American anthropologist based in Scotland. She has conducted research on egalitarianism, indigenous cosmology, philosophical anthropology, aesthetics, the ludic and linguistics through fieldwork in Amazonia. She has extensively studied indigenous Piaroa people in the Orinoco basin of Venezuela.
Pages improved
edit- Global Health - New section added on Neglected tropical diseases.
- Maternal death - 289,000 women died of pregnancy or childbirth related causes in 2013. These causes range from severe bleeding to obstructed labour. Citation added.
- Memory and aging - short section added on Social Science Research on Memory and Ageing.
Work in progress
edit- Translation of Georgina Born (British academic, anthropologist and musician) into Spanish using the Content Translation tool.
What can I do after the event?
editYou may find these useful if you want to learn further about editing:
External links
editParticipants - Sign Up Here!
editPrior to the event:
- RSVP: [email protected]
- Do you have a Wikipedia User Name?
- No? Create a Wikipedia account
- Yes? Go to Step #2
- Sign up! Add your Wikipedia User Name to this section by clicking the blue button below (follow instructions). Your name will be added to the bottom of this page