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Vol. 29 (2)
2025



Articles

A puzzle Narcissus: ethnography faces delirium and “stays” at the Hotel da Loucura – Rio de Janeiro

Luciano von der Goltz Vianna

The present article starts from a debate that aims to understand how the disciplinary regimes of Anthropology lead the researcher to follow a protocol of questions and interests in his research. The objective here is to discuss the existing

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Articles

Por trás das crianças, dos objetos e dos cuises: agência e pesquisa em um bairro periurbano de Córdoba (Argentina)

Rocío Fatyass

Neste artigo retomo ideias emergentes de um projeto de pesquisa com crianças que acontece em um bairro periurbano da cidade de Villa Nueva (Córdoba, Argentina) e discuto a agência das crianças e sua participação na pesquisa em ciências

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Articles

The construction of knowledge about the Amazon ecosystem by a Brazilian scientific institution

Aline Moreira Magalhães

Since expeditions by naturalists in the 18th century, the production of modern knowledge about the flora and fauna of the Amazon has included people who know the ecosystem from experience. At the National Institute for Amazon Research (INPA),

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Interdisciplinarities

Living in a Siza house: the experience of auteur architecture in Malagueira, Évora

Juliana Pereira, Ana Catarina Costa, André Carmo, Eduardo Ascensão

This article draws on the genealogy of studies on the house in Portuguese Anthropology and Architecture as well as on recent perspectives coming from the Geographies of Architecture, to explore the way residents of auteur architecture experience

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Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Introduction: Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses

Annabelle Dias Félix, Maria João Leote de Carvalho, Catarina Frois

In the global political landscape, as far-right parties gain prominence, populist rhetoric advocating for harsher justice and security policies is becoming increasingly prevalent. Proponents of this rhetoric base their discourse on “alarming”

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Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Privatizing urban security: control, hospitality and suspicion in the Brazilian shopping

Susana Durão, Paola Argentin

In this article we argue that hospitality security – a modality that confuses control and care – operates through the actions of security guards in the creation of what we call pre-cases. From a dense ethnography accompanying these workers in a

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Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

“Police abuse, we face it every day”: ethnographic notes on racist police violence

Pedro Varela

Racist police violence is one of the most brutal facets of racism in our society, reflecting structures of power and oppression that marginalize sectors of our society. This paper emphasizes the importance of understanding this reality, highlighting

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Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Marginality, security, surveillance, crime, imprisonment: reflections on an intellectual and methodological trajectory

Catarina Frois

This article engages with contemporary anthropological and ethnographic methodological debates by reflecting on the challenges of conducting research in contexts related with marginality, deviance, surveillance, and imprisonment. It examines the

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Dossiê “Beyond penal populism: complexifying justice systems and security through qualitative lenses”

Navigating the labyrinth: qualitative research in the securitized border regions of North Africa

Lydia Letsch

Qualitative researchers face unique challenges in the dynamic domain of border regions, particularly when venturing into highly securitized areas with a constant military presence, advanced surveillance, and restricted access zones. This article

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Memory

Uma vida, muitas vidas: entrevista com Victor Bandeira, etnógrafo e viajante

Rita Tomé, João Leal

Falecido recentemente, Victor Bandeira (1931-2024) desempenhou um papel fundamental no desenvolvimento da museologia etnográfica em Portugal. Foi graças às suas expedições a África (1960-1961, 1966, 1967), ao Brasil (1964-1965) e à Indonésia

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Lévi-Strauss Award

From the “note of condolence” to the “unjust aggression”: news about death written by the PMSC

Jo P. Klinkerfus

This paper is a reduced and synthesized version of the ethnography on PMSC Notícia, the news platform of the Military Police of Santa Catarina (PMSC). Based on news about death, dying and the dead published on the website in 2021, social

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Vol. 29 (1)
2025



Artigos

“Enough of this fake war”: ecologies of value, workers and environmentalists in Southern Italy

Antonio Maria Pusceddu

This article mobilizes the ecologies of value as a conceptual framework to account for the conflicts, contradictions and dilemmas arousing from the experience of the contemporary socio-ecological crisis. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Brindisi,

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Artigos

“Preventing them from being adrift”: challenges for professional practice in the Argentinean mental health system for children and adolescents

Axel Levin

This ethnographic article addresses the difficulties, practices, and strategies of the professionals of the only Argentine hospital fully specialized in the treatment of mental health problems of children and adolescents. More specifically, it

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Artigos

Making Children: an iconography of the ibejadas in the centers, religious article shops, and factories of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Morena Freitas

The ibejadas are childlike entities that, alongside the caboclos, pretos-velhos, exus, and pombagiras, inhabit the umbanda pantheon. In religious centers, these entities manifest through colorful images, joyful sung chants and an abundance of sweets

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Artigos

To migrate and to belong: intimacy, ecclesiastical absence, and playful competition in the Aymara Anata-Carnival of Chiapa (Chile)

Pablo Mardones

The article analyzes the Anata-Carnival festivity celebrated in the Andean town of Chiapa in the Tarapacá Region, Great North of Chile. I suggest that this celebration constitutes one of the main events that promote the reproduction of feelings of

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Artigos

Hauntology and nostalgia in the touristed landscapes of Sarajevo

Marta Roriz

Drawing on anthropological and ethnographic developments in the study of urban tourism, this essay offers a description of Sarajevo’s tourist landscapes from the perspective of an ethnographic tourist, detailing how time is inscribed in the

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Memory

David J. Webster in Mozambique: minimal epistolary (1971-1979)

Lorenzo Macagno

The article comments on, contextualizes and transcribes the epistolary exchange between social anthropologist David J. Webster (1945-1989) and ethnologist and Portuguese colonial official António Rita-Ferreira (1922-2014) between 1971 and 1979.

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Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

Género e cuidados na experiência transnacional cabo-verdiana: introdução

Luzia Oca González, Fernando Barbosa Rodrigues and Iria Vázquez Silva

Neste dossiê sobre o género e os cuidados na comunidade transnacional cabo-verdiana, as leitoras e leitores encontrarão os resultados de diferentes etnografias feitas tanto em Cabo Verde como nos países de destino da sua diáspora no sul da

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Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

“Vizinhu ta trocadu pratu ku kada casa”… Caring to avoid hunger in Brianda, Santiago Island, Cape Verde

Fernando Barbosa Rodrigues

Taking the ethnographic field as a starting point – the interior of the island of Santiago in the Republic of Cabo Verde – and basing on participant observation and the collection of testimonies from the local inhabitants of Brianda, this

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Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

“Eu já aguentei muita gente nessa vida”: about care, gender, and generation in Cape Verdian families

Andréa Lobo and André Omisilê Justino

This article reflects on the care category when crossed by the dynamics of gender and generation in Cape Verde. The act of caring is of fundamental importance for family dynamics in this society, which is marked by mobilities of multiple orders –

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Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

Global care chains in Cape Verdean migrations: women who stay so that others can migrate

Luzia Oca González and Iria Vázquez Silva

This article is based on fieldwork conducted with women of four generations, belonging to five families living in the locality of Burela (Galicia) and their domestic groups originating from the island of Santiago. We present three ethnographic

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Dossier ‘Gender and Care in the Cape Verdean transnational experience’

The difficult balance between work and life: care arrangements in three generations of Cape Verdean migrants

Keina Espiñeira González, Belén Fernández-Suárez and Antía Pérez-Caramés

The reconciliation of the personal, work and family spheres of migrants is an emerging issue in migration studies, with concepts such as the transnational family and global care chains. In this contribution we analyse the strategies deployed by

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Debate

Universal foreigners: the ‘ontological turn’ considered from a phenomenological perspective

Filipe Verde

This article questions the consistency, reasonableness, and fruitfulness of the methodological proposals and idea of anthropological knowledge of the “ontological turn” in anthropology. Taking as its starting point the book manifesto produced by

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Debate

Universos estrangeiros: ainda a polêmica virada ontológica na antropologia

Rogério Brittes W. Pires

O artigo “Estrangeiros universais”, de Filipe Verde, apresenta uma crítica ao que chama de “viragem ontológica” na antropologia, tomando o livro The Ontological Turn, de Holbraad e Pedersen (2017), como ponto de partida (2025a: 252).1 O

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Debate

Resposta a Rogério Pires

Filipe Verde

Se há evidência que a antropologia sempre reconheceu é a de que o meio em que somos inculturados molda de forma decisiva a nossa compreensão do mundo e de nós mesmos. Isso é assim para a própria antropologia e, portanto, ser antropólogo é

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Debate

Da ontologia da fenomenologia na antropologia: ensaio de resposta

Rogério Brittes W. Pires

Um erro do construtivismo clássico é postular que verdades alheias seriam construídas socialmente, mas as do próprio enunciador não. Que minha visão de mundo, do fazer antropológico e da ciência sejam moldadas por meu ambiente – em

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Note on the cover

Note on the cover

Pedro Calapez

© Pedro Calapez. 2023. (Pormenor) Díptico B; Técnica e Suporte: Acrílico sobre tela colada em MDF e estrutura em madeira. Dimensões: 192 x 120 x 4 cm. Imagem gentilmente cedidas pelo autor. Créditos fotográficos: MPPC / Pedro

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Magazine

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Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica

Magazine

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Authors

Articles Submission

Numbers

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About

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Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica

Dossier Between restitution and re-appropriation

Open Restitution Africa: a public talk in Lisbon

Molemo Moiola

22.12.2025

restitution, African museums, Africa, school, sound, return, countries.

My name is Molemo Moiloa, and I am from South Africa. I'm an artist and researcher. I work on a project called Open Restitution Africa, which is a collaboration between people from across the African continent, but mostly based in Johannesburg, South Africa, and Nairobi, Kenya. We work with people from many countries in Africa and the African diaspora – both historical diaspora and recent diaspora – on how to think about restitution from our own perspective, and what we need from our own perspective. This is my first time actually engaging with the Lusophone context. So, I'm actually very excited to hear from you and I want to learn from you. I will speak just very shortly and then we can share.


Molemo 1


These are probably statistics you are familiar with, which are very important. But they are just a representation in numbers of something much bigger that was lost and taken away. I think the most important thing about them is that they should remind us of why we are trying to do the work we're trying to do. And what restitution should really mean.


Molemo 2


You might have noticed around the world many things are starting to get returned. Maybe not so much here, it seems. But there's an increase in restitutions happening across the world. And it really feels like a good thing is happening. Something is kind of changing.


Molemo 3


At Open Restitution Africa we do some research around restitution. And the information I'm going to share with you is from a recent research report.



What you see here is an academic publishing on the theme of restitution.


Molemo 4


In relation to the African continent, you can see that there's a big jump just after 2016. It's been growing a little bit from 2009 already. But 2016 is the moment when the French president makes a speech in Ouagadougou and says that things should be returned. And from there, you can just see the change, as this graphic shows. Thus the question is, really, what does this change mean? And is it automatically a good thing? Or should we also be careful and think about it in a careful way?


Molemo 5


I think it comes back to this question of why we want to do restitution and what it's supposed to do.


Molemo 6


It's important to know that Africans have been demanding returns for at least 200 years. So even though it's been small, and now it's gone big, it's been happening over a very long period of time. For example, in the 1960s Africans were demanding heritage back at the time of independence of many countries in the continent. And this was because they were going to become independent, so they needed their cultural heritage returned. There was an understanding that it was not just about an object. It was really about how do we become a new nation? How do we repair who we are? It was about being proud of who we are.


So, we've seen the growth in academia. But it's quite similar in social media and a popular discussion. The growth, for example, that there is on the Benin Bronzes, has expanded massively over the same period of time.


Molemo 7


If we go look at that section, that was very big. After the speech of Ouagadougou, this is kind of what it looks like now, this movement upwards.


Molemo 8


But if I was to ask you, how many of these people do you think are African? What would you guess?


Molemo 9


This is what you see. Actually, the case is that the growth is not of Africans, despite the 200-year history. The growth is non-Africans publishing and quoting each other. They are not quoting Africans when they publish. So I think this statistic really tells you that if Africans have been fighting for 200 years, but they're not the ones being heard, then the question is, who is being heard? And what are they saying? This is the important question.


The main problem with this inequality is that the key issue in Europe and America is museums. Museums have these objects, and they need to leave. This becomes the dominant conversation. But what happens when they leave? How do they leave? And when they arrive somewhere else, what happens after that? There's no discussion about this. It also means that we spend our time fighting about maybe some racist things someone said or arguing about the details of history. But what we don't discuss is what is the best way for us to be engaging in the process of restitution? What are the best decisions we can make together? And what is it that Africans truly want in the restitution process?


A part of the discussion that is not happening is that Africans almost never get to speak to Africans. Usually, they speak only with their coloniser. For example, now in Africa there are many conferences on museums, like the French organised a conference on museums in French, and the Germans organised a conference on museums in relation to former German colonies. But Africans don't get to share tactics and strategies. One of the other things that is not happening enough is a discussion with the diaspora. There is not enough dialogue happening. Often it will be the African diaspora say in Europe, having a battle with the former coloniser, but not enough conversation is happening between Africa and the African Diaspora. And that includes the historic diaspora as in the Caribbean, in North America, and Brazil, for example. An example of this [lack of communication] happened recently in the United States of America. There was a court case to stop the restitution of Benin Bronzes. And the court case was brought by African Americans. And the reason they said that the bronzes should not be returned is because the Kingdom of Benin had been involved in the slave trades in Benin. I'm not from Benin, so it's not really my business, but I think it's an important question. And if restitution is about repair and humanity, then we should be able to have difficult conversations and engage with each other across the Atlantic about history at every level. So I think it's an important opportunity to really have a conversation with the diaspora.


In the last two slides I want to show you, from the research, the top most prolific authors.


Molemo 10


These are the authors who've written the most about restitution over time. And the important one to look at is Prince Folarin Shyllon from Nigeria. He's a real prince, or he was a real prince. And he's now passed away. But he's been working since – I believe – the 70s, on restitution and publishing a lot. And even though he wrote most of the articles and books, when we look at who's being quoted and referenced the most in academic literature, he's not even in the top 10. He's number 19. And instead, we have an European [Dan Hicks], who by now only had one book on restitution.


Molemo 11


He [Hicks] is also the most retweeted. He's more retweeted than BBC or CNN on restitution. For all of us on restitution, he gets more retweets than any of those. And I think this role of the internet is actually really important. Because Prince Follarin was very old, so he wasn't on the internet. But there are quite elderly men, for example [Kwame] Opoku. He is the first African that is most referenced, and he mostly publishes on a blog online. He just writes a lot of articles online, and gets a lot of information out. That's why he's over there. I think what's important is to know that these two people are by far the ones listened to the most, and the third one is the French president. You will notice I don't really say the names because they are the ones dominating the conversation. Then the theme becomes their problem, right? Which is the French president and someone who works in a British museum. Their concerns, their issues, even if they are our allies, will still be put ahead of African issues.


For example, Kwane Opoku writes on many things, but he has an article about the problem of colonial languages dividing Africans regarding restitution issues. And so, this question of language, and I think in the Lusophone context in particular, but even Francophone, Anglophone, is that we don't talk to each other enough. A key problem is the way the continent remains divided, of course due to the colonial language barriers of French, English and Portuguese. These barriers are tragic and more translation work needs to be done, and I would love to talk more about how we can do that. We [Molemo Moiloa from South Africa and Chao Maina from Kenya, co-founders of ORA] are both from former British colonies, but have been trying to develop more Francophone connections. We have a tutoring series launching on YouTube that was developed by an all-female African film team. And we're making sure it's dubbed in French [by a Senegalese team of women]. But there is much more to do.


Another issue related to language is even just how we refer to certain things. For example, we usually use the words "artefact" or "human remains". And these are words that come from the museums. These are not the African words that we use for these kinds of issues. For example, you'll notice that at Open Restitution Africa we don't say "human remains". We say "human ancestors", because we want to re-humanise the process. And we need to develop these types of languages together. Then again, this isn't the concern of the global north necessarily. This is a question that we need to create from an African perspective.


Molemo 12


The good news is that many incredible Africans are doing really important work. And so this is an easy problem to solve. It's really about following the right people on Twitter and retweeting the right tweets, and ensuring that we're circulating the voices of people form the African continent and the African diaspora as much as possible. For you to know, the man with the yellow and pink hat is Kwame Opoku. And that's something we can all do in this work.


I like to call it an African library of ideas. There are really interesting ideas, and many of them are quite new. We also have the possibility to contribute to these new ideas. The vital thing is that these people are also thinking a lot about what does it mean to repair who we are as people and the complex work it takes, which is not about moving an object from one place to another. It's a much more complex work of law, education, spirituality and healing. There is a much bigger world of work that needs to be done and these people are doing amazing.


That's it. Thank you very much and I really look forward to hearing from you.




Molemo Moiloa director at Andani.Africa and co-lead of the project Open Restitution Africa

Related links

Introduction: the act of restitution – protagonists and their narratives

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Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica

Magazine

About

Editorial Team

Authors

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About

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Iscte-Instituto Universitário de Lisboa
Edifício 4 - Iscte_Conhecimento e Inovação, Sala B1.130 
Av. Forças Armadas, 40 1649-026 Lisboa, Portugal

(+351) 210 464 057
etnografica@cria.org.pt

Financiado pela FCT, I. P. (UIDB/04038/2020 e UIDP/04038/2020)

© 2026 Revista Etnográfica