STUDENT FIELD REPORTS FROM THE

2001 ETHNOGRAPHIC FIELD SCHOOL

IN COSTA RICA

 

The North Carolina State University Summer 2001 Ethnographic Field School in Costa Rica final reports are in html format.  Click on any of the underlined papers for a full copy of the paper.  Copies can be printed onto your printer.  If you have any trouble, contact Tim Wallace, the editor and field school leader.  tim_wallace@ncsu.edu or at 919-515-9025.

 

Nicole Blum, "Desarrollo Sin Chimineas:" A Political Ecology Assessment of 30 years of Tourism in Quepos and Manuel Antonio

Emily E. Brewster, "La Futura": Teenage Life in Quepos, Costa Rica and Its Relevance to the Social and Economic Future of the Country

Joanna L. Capps, Hotels and Their Environmental Effects in Quepos and Manuel Antonio

Alexandra Ferry, Stereotypes and Realities of Family Interaction in Boca Vieja, Quepos

K. Berenice Gonzalez M., Manuel Antonio and Quepos: "Un Circulo de Necesidades Mutuas Necesarias para Su Existencia"

Barbara Lagemann, Generational Differences in Women's Lives in Quepos

Patricia McElroy, Lifestyles of Retired Couples in Quepos

Maureen McNamara, Dealing with Tranquility

Xiomara V. Mills, Food Beliefs and Habits of Ticos

D. Jody Owens, The Best of Both Worlds? Land Use in Costa Rica's Central Pacific Region

N. Adaire Parker, A Community among Us: A Look at the Community among the Foreign Residents in Quepos

Joseph M. Sepko, Adventure Tourism and Gender Differences: Changing the Face of Tourism in Manuel Antonio and Quepos

Brian Smith, Expatriates in Quepos

Lauren E. Swift, Superstition vs. Modernization: How the Belief system of One Tourist Town Corresponds with the Impact of External Forces

Justin M. Whitaker, Breaking Free from Societal Bonds: The Effects of Tourism on the Rising Crime Rate in Quepos

J. Blair Wiggins, "Dime con Quien Andas y Te Dire Quien Eres," Tell Me Who You Walk with, and I Will Tell Who You Are