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53 Soc. Probs. 294 (2006)
Introduction: What is Institutional Ethnography

handle is hein.journals/socprob53 and id is 300 raw text is: Introduction: What is Institutional
Ethnography?
MARJORIE L. DEVAULT, Syracuse University
Institutional ethnography is the label that has come to be used for an approach to
investigation of the social that focuses on textually-mediated social organization (Smith
1990b). Developed and named by Canadian sociologist Dorothy E. Smith (1987) in the early
1980s, institutional ethnography has matured over the past several decades and spread not
only internationally in sociology but through a number of other fields such as nursing, edu-
cation, social work, planning, and so on. The practice of institutional ethnography has devel-
oped incrementally; Smith's first writing provided a sketch for the approach, but she always
insisted that it was a method that researchers would build collaboratively, working out how
to proceed as we go along. Those using the approach have been sharing work through infor-
mal meetings and networking, elaborating and specifying the outlines of institutional ethnog-
raphy, and developing the approach in working with students (DeVault and McCoy 2002;
and, for a useful teaching text, Campbell and Gregor 2002). Recently, Smith herself has pro-
duced a pair of books that elaborate and illustrate her vision of this alternative sociology
(Smith 2005, forthcoming).
Institutional ethnographies are built from the examination of work processes and study
of how they are coordinated, typically through texts and discourses of various sorts. Work
activities are taken as the fundamental grounding of social life, and an institutional ethnogra-
phy generally takes some particular experience (and associated work processes) as a point of
entry. The work involved could be part of a paid job; it might fall into the broader field of
unpaid or invisible work, as so much of women's work does; or it might comprise the activities
of some client group. In any case, there is recognition that institutional ideologies typically
acknowledge some kinds of work and not others. Thus, the investigator attends to all of the
work that's done in the setting, and also notes which activities are recognized and accounted
institutionally and which are not. Analysis proceeds by way of tracing the social relations
people are drawn into through their work (with the term social relations taken in its Marxist
sense to mean not relationships but connections among work processes). The point is to show
how people in one place are aligning their activities with relevances produced elsewhere, in
order to illuminate the forces that shape experience at the point of entry. Many institutional
ethnographers have adopted a rhetoric of mapping to highlight the analytic goal of explication
rather than theory building; the analysis is meant to be usable in the way that a map can be
used to find one's way.
Institutional ethnography's focus on texts comes from an empirical observation-that
technologies of social control are increasingly and pervasively textual and discursive (Smith
1999). Texts such as medical charts, enrollment reports, strategic plans, and so on are mecha-
nisms for coordinating activity across many different sites. Social science is sometimes a part
of this coordinative apparatus, and perhaps as a result, we've tended to take this kind of textual
coordination for granted, too often looking through texts without noticing their power or
Direct correspondence to: Marjorie L. DeVault, Department of Sociology, 302 Maxwell Hall, Syracuse University,
Syracuse, NY 13244. E-mail: mdevault@maxwell.syr.edu.
Social Problems, Vol. 53, Issue 3, pp. 294-298, ISSN 0037-7791, electronic ISSN 1533-8533.
© 2006 by Society for the Study of Social Problems, Inc. All rights reserved. Please direct all requests for permission to photo-
copy or reproduce article content through the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions website, at http://www.
ucpress.edu/journals/rights.htm.

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