"A mark of good ethnography is that it answers questions that emerge out of the very process of analysis. Or to put it another way, finding out what the questions are (for only after analysis can they be seen always to have been in plain view) is the primary task of ethnography. This timely volume shows not only why evidence is a vexed question, but why what counts as evidence is quite properly itself an artifact of the ethnographic process. A genuinely useful read."- Christina Toren, University of St Andrews."What is it about evidence that has produced such a singular silence within anthropological treatments of method and epistemology? How Do We Know? is just the kind of collection we need to get a conversation going, and goes a long way toward helping us situate the concept of evidence in—and for—anthropology. The editors have brought together an impressive roster of established and emerging scholars, all of whom provide fascinating case studies through which to work out questions of evidence. Anyone interested in how anthropology gets done, and what it produces in the doing, will want to have this book on their shelf."- Matthew Engelke, London School of Economics.