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Accountability in Social Research - Issues and Debates (Hardcover, 2002 ed.)
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Accountability in Social Research - Issues and Debates (Hardcover, 2002 ed.)
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The book considers issues relating to accountability in social
research by juxtaposing seven ways of approaching the issues and by
moving toward the development of a particular approach to the
earning of trust on the part of researchers. A conception of the
practice and assessment of discursive accountability is presented
as an option for consideration. The book grapples with the issue of
accountability in social research by considering the extent to
which and ways in which it is addressed in a number of different
positions regarding the practice of social science. The focus of
the book is on reviewing discourses around the practice of
professional' inquiry, with a view to highlighting differing
arguments around the question of what it might mean to assess
researchers' accountabilities. The book is structured around
considering in detail various views on accountability in relation
to one another. A comprehensive comparison of arguments is
presented in the first two chapters of the book. The debate that is
set up in the first two chapters forms the background to the
elaboration and development (in Chapter 3) of constructivist
argumentation in relation to the question of how accounts as set
forth by researchers should be treated (by colleagues,
participants, and other audiences). The continuing debate about the
status to be afforded to constructions developed by researchers is
tackled in this chapter. Constructivist thinking is then extended
toward what is named in the book a trusting constructivist'
position. This position focuses on ways in which trust earning and
trust awarding in the context of social inquiry can proceed without
researchers having to justify themselves as striving togain access
to knowledge as representation of reality. Through the development
of the trusting constructivist position, the book explores ways of
creating trust through processes of social discourse. An assessment
of actual research projects in view of the debates set up in
earlier chapters then takes place. Through these assessments
readers can relate the details of the arguments developed in
earlier chapters to their implications for judging the practice of
(accountable) social inquiry.
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