[Genealib] Professional Genealogist and Family Historian: Discussion, Assessment and Classification

Chris Tinney vctinney at sbcglobal.net
Thu Aug 2 11:05:26 EDT 2007


Professional Genealogist and Family Historian: 
Discussion, Assessment and Classification 

How about a discussion on CODE: 27199G 
TITLE: Genealogists 

DEFINITION: Research genealogical background 
of individual or family to establish descent from 
specific ancestor or identify forebears of individual 
or family. 
http://www.occupationalinfo.org/onet/27199g.html 
It includes: 
TASKS 

KNOWLEDGE 

SKILLS 

ABILITIES 

WORK ACTIVITIES 

WORK CONTEXT 

INTERESTS 

WORK VALUES 

CROSSWALKS 

Or, a true assessment of professional 
genealogists,in the field of social work? 
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/documentationpublications.htm#Professional 

Classification of genealogy as an AUXILIARY science 
of history, does not fully convey independent standing; 
an academic discipline in its own right. It should be 
combined with academic genealogy, 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_genealogy 
and anthropology, for international university acceptance. 
SEE: Academic Education Learning Resources: Educators 
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/academiceducationlearningresources.htm 
Scholarly genealogy networking by age, ancestry, 
breed, creation, descent, education, engendering, 
epoch, era, family, formation, generation lineage, 
parentage, pedigree, period, procreation, production, 
profession, progeniture, reproduction, span, stock 
and time frame. 

The Anthropological Index Online has some current 
interesting titles: 
http://www.aio.anthropology.org.uk/aio/AIO.html 

Ella Landau-Tasseron (2003). Adoption, acknowledgement 
of paternitity and false genealogical claims in Arabian and 
Islamic societies 
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (London). 
66:2 pp 169-92. 

Frank N. Pieke (2003). The genealogical mentality 
in modern China Journal of Asian studies. 62:1 pp 101-28. 

Bruce Tranter, Jed Donoghue (2003). Convict ancestry: 
a neglected aspect of Australian identity 
Nations and nationalism. 9:4 pp 555-77. . . . 

Jonas Drungilas (2004). Ethno-social mobility in the 
Grand Duchy of Lithuania: the example of Gruzevskis family 
(second half of the 16th century - early 18th century) 
[English summary] [Lithuanian] Lietuvos istorijos metrastis. 
2 pp 53-78 

Valerie Feschet (2004). Passing on the family names 
in Western Europe from the late 20th to the early 21st 
century [English summary] [French] L'Homme. 169:61-87 

Justyna Harbanowicz (2004). The renaissance of family chronicles 
[English summary] [Polish] Literatura ludowa. 48:3 pp 41-51 

Javier Sanchiz, Jose Ignacio Conde_Diaz_Rubin (2005). 
The Monterde and Antillon family in New Spain. Genealogical 
reconstruction (Part one) [English summary] [Spanish] 
Estudios de historia novohispana. 32 pp 10, 93-164. 
- Genealogical reconstruction (second part) [English summary] 
[Spanish] Estudios de historia novohispana. 33 pp 10, 97-172. 
- Genealogical reconstruction (third part) [English summary] 
[Spanish] Estudios de historia novohispana. 34 pp 12-13, 119-66. 

Marek Jakoubek, Lenka Budilova (2006). Kinship, social 
organisation and genealogical manipulations in Gypsy osadas 
in eastern Slovakia Romani studies. 16:1 pp 63-82. 

Hermann Amborn (2006). The contemporary significance 
of what has been. Three approaches to remembering the past: 
lineage, Gada, and oral tradition History in Africa. 33 pp 53-84. 

Lau-fong Mak (2004). Naming and collective memory in 
the Malay Muslim world [Chinese summary] 
Taiwan journal of anthropology. 2:2 pp 81-114. 

Jari Eilola (2005). Family history and everyday life: 
some aspects of the Finnish research tradition 
[in thematic issue 'Everyday life'] Ethnologia fennica. 
32 pp 34-43. 

Pilar Gonzalbo_Aizpuru (2007). Afectos e intereses 
en los matrimonios en la Ciudad de Mexico a fines de colonia 
[Spanish] Historia mexicana. 56:4 pp 1117-61. 
ETC. 

Respectfully yours, 

Tom Tinney, Sr. 
Who's Who in America, 
Millennium Edition [54th] through 2004 
Who's Who In Genealogy and Heraldry, [both editions] 
Family Genealogy & History Internet Education Directory 
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/ 
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