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Where Systems Touch the Ground is a landmark anthology of applied anthropology essays that explores how culture and power shape the fragile machinery of everyday life. Edited by Jeffrey Iverson, this collection brings together incisive, field‑tuned analyses of the systems that govern, surveil, support, and often fail the communities they are meant to serve. From digital infrastructures and algorithmic bias to workplace culture, public health, and state-community relations, each essay examines the lived experience of systemic contact-where abstract institutions meet real people, and where policy becomes practice.
Rather than treating systems as distant or impersonal, the contributors illuminate how they are enacted through bodies, relationships, and cultural expectations. They show how trust is built or broken in bureaucratic encounters, how surveillance reshapes autonomy, how design decisions reflect moral economies, and how communities resist, reinterpret, and reimagine the structures that shape their futures. The essays move across domains-education, governance, infrastructure, organizational life, digital platforms, and more-but share a common commitment to understanding systems from the ground up.
This volume positions applied anthropology not as a passive observer but as an active participant in the work of social transformation. It offers frameworks for analyzing complexity, amplifying marginalized voices, and engaging ethically with the communities most affected by structural inequality. With clarity, rigor, and emotional resonance, Where Systems Touch the Ground affirms that anthropology is not only a tool for understanding the world-it is a method for changing it.