Jean-Pierre Olivier de Sardan

Jean-Pierre Olivier de Sardan (born in Languedoc, 11 July 1941) is a leading French and Nigerien anthropologist, currently Professor of Anthropology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Marseilles. He is also emeritus Director of Research at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris, but normally resides in Niamey, Niger where he has conducted research since the 1960s.

Background

Olivier de Sardan comes from aristocratic background in Languedoc in southern France, and was educated in Paris where his father was posted as a civil servant. He has seven children and has been married more than once.

Olivier de Sardan studied politics and anthropology in France from the late 1950s, gaining a Diplôme at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po, 1961), Licence in Sociology from the Sorbonne (1963), and in 1967 his PhD (Doctorat de 3e cycle) in anthropology (ethnologie) supervised by R. Bastide. His Doctorat d’état was directed by Jean Rouch and Georges Balandier and awarded in 1982.[1] He was an activist against the Vietnam war, and participated in the May 1968 demonstrations in France.

For his doctoral work he studied social change among the Wogo people in Niger, after first being recruited by Jean Rouch to conduct interviews with this group over a year in 1965. Over time his close observations of the Songhay-Zarma people have informed other projects, on more general topics, but all grounded in empirical researches in Africa: anthropology of development, medical anthropology, anthropology of bureaucacies, and, more generally, an anthropology of public actions and of the delivery of public and collective goods and services in Africa. Known as an unconventional anthropologist, he had many collaborations with sociologists,historians or political scientists, and has produced innovative concepts such as "local modes of governance" and "practical norms".

He helped found, and was first President of, APAD - the Association Euro-Africaine pour l’Anthropologie du Changement social et du Développement and its journal. He established LASDEL in Niamey (Laboratoire d’études et de recherches sur les dynamiques sociales et le développement local).[2] He obtained citizenship of Niger in 1999.[3]

Research contributions

Olivier de Sardan's first fieldwork was classic anthropological investigation of a particular society, the Wogo along the banks and islands of the Niger River in Western Niger. Several later books describe the language and culture of the broader Songhay-Zarma populations of this region, including their therapeutic practices and former slavery relations. He and the visual anthropologist Jean Rouch are probably the foremost ethnographers of western Niger.

Olivier de Sardan has also made significant contributions to the understanding of social change and development on African societies, through empirical observation in Niger, Benin, Mali and other countries (including the Lozère region in France). After fifteen years he moved away from classic ethnographic description of small scale society to observe how modernity and western influences are incorporated into, and subverted by, African societies - particularly through public and collective services delivery, and by development aid. In his 1995 book (Olivier de Sardan, 1995, English version 2005) he significantly enhanced the field of anthropology of development, advocating for a "fundamental" and non normative anthropology of development (and not only an "applied" one), being attentive to the drifts, unintended effects and implementations gaps of development projects, describing the various perceptions and logics of development 'actors' and stakeholders in Africa and how they related to existing socio-political structures. The techniques of international development aid, especially "participation", came under scrutiny and he set out some of the key features of anthropological investigation of development impacts. A further volume (2000) was the first study of development aid "brokers" situated between local societies and international aid agencies. He also made decisive contributions to the anthropology of public action, the bureaucratic mode of governance in Africa, and the practical norms regulationg non compliant practices of civil servants .

Recent work has focussed on local powers and decentralisation in the context of stratified societies in Africa (Olivier de Sardan and Tidjani Alou, 2009), on political corruption among state actors in cash-starved African contexts (Blundo and Olivier de Sardan, 2006) and on the ethnography of elections (Olivier de Sardan, 2015).[4]

He has also contributed to insert medical anthropology into health policy and system research (HPSR), analysing health service delivery in West Africa and the interactions between patients and health workers (Jaffré and Olivier de Sardan 2003), and developing an empirical approach of public health policies in Sahelian countries (Olivier de Sardan & Ridde, 2015).

Olivier de Sardan has authored a reference book on anthropological method and epistemological issues (2008, translated in English 2015).[5] He has strong views on the need to conduct rigorous and long term fieldwork,[6] and he has developed with Thomas Bierschenk an innovative procedure for team research and collective fieldwork in anthropology (the ECRIS canvas).[7]

Honours

Key publications

In English

Books

Articles

In French

Books

References

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