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Social science departments, both nationally and internationally,
market boundless career destinations for their graduates but fail
to identify the pathways to these lucrative destinations, and
appear oblivious to the social forces that threaten their
existence, such as the discerning parent's investment in their
offspring's education and mounting individual student debt. This
book responds to these social forces, drawing on Michael Burawoy's
model of Public Sociology to show how a research-centred
experiential internship provides opportunities for students to draw
on their prior learning and realise their potential to create
pathways towards employment. The author demonstrates how a
specific, research-based course leading to employment with a
non-government organisation or government department was evaluated
and incrementally developed, giving voice to its multiple
beneficiaries. Designed for university teachers, this book will
appeal to those in social science departments who are using an
internship, service learning or capstone model for their senior
undergraduate classes.
Finding Your Ethical Research Self introduces novice researchers to
the need for ethical reflection in practice and gives them the
confidence to use their knowledge and skill when, later as
researchers, they are confronted by big ethical moments in the
field. The 12 chapters build on each other, but not in a linear
way. Core ethical concepts like consent and confidentiality once
established in the early chapters are later challenged. The new
focus becomes how to address qualitative research ethics when
confidentiality and consent take on a limited form. This approach
helps students understand that the application of concepts always
requires thoughtful adaptation in different contexts and the book
provides guidance on how to do this. Classroom/workbook exercises
develop alternative solutions to create process consent, internal
confidentiality, and engage reference groups, as examples. The
first eight chapters allow students to develop their ethical
research self before thinking through how they might address formal
ethics review. Formal ethics review is deliberately not introduced
until Chapter 9. Chapter 10 offers practical help to elements of
review, before Chapter 11 emphasises the key message by providing
examples of researchers' dilemmas in the field using vignettes and
discussion. By providing these examples, students become aware that
these can arise, explore how they might arise, and recognise how
they might deal with them in the moment when they are unavoidable.
With numerous examples of ethical dilemmas and issues and questions
and exercises to encourage self-reflection, this reflexive,
learn-by-doing model of research ethics will be highly useful to
the novice researcher, undergraduate, and postgraduate research
student.
This handbook is a much-needed and in-depth review of the
distinctive set of ethical considerations which accompanies
qualitative research. This is particularly crucial given the
emergent, dynamic and interactional nature of most qualitative
research, which too often allows little time for reflection on the
important ethical responsibilities and obligations Contributions
from leading international researchers have been carefully
organised into six key thematic sections: Part One: Thick
Descriptions Of Qualitative Research Ethics Part Two: Qualitative
Research Ethics By Technique Part Three: Ethics As Politics Part
Four: Qualitative Research Ethics With Vulnerable Groups Part Five:
Relational Research Ethics Part Six: Researching Digitally This
Handbook is a one-stop resource on qualitative research ethics
across the social sciences that draws on the lessons learned and
the successful methods for surmounting problems - the tried and
true, and the new.
Neither ethics committees nor qualitative researchers can predict
the types of ethical dilemmas that will happen in the field, only
that they will routinely occur. In Qualitative Ethics in Practice,
a team of fifteen top researchers from various disciplines and
nationalities offer ethical strategies unique to qualitative
researchers for those "big ethical moments" beyond what can be
predicted by ethics committees. Ideally structured for qualitative
classes that tackle ethics issues, the book -calls for an ethical
code unique to the practice of qualitative research; -uses a
variety of cases from education, community development, tourism,
family, and other settings to examine how researchers addressed
ethical dilemmas in practice, including the infamous Belfast
Project; -highlights some relevant models and programs being
developed that may lead to solutions.
Social science departments, both nationally and internationally,
market boundless career destinations for their graduates but fail
to identify the pathways to these lucrative destinations, and
appear oblivious to the social forces that threaten their
existence, such as the discerning parent's investment in their
offspring's education and mounting individual student debt. This
book responds to these social forces, drawing on Michael Burawoy's
model of Public Sociology to show how a research-centred
experiential internship provides opportunities for students to draw
on their prior learning and realise their potential to create
pathways towards employment. The author demonstrates how a
specific, research-based course leading to employment with a
non-government organisation or government department was evaluated
and incrementally developed, giving voice to its multiple
beneficiaries. Designed for university teachers, this book will
appeal to those in social science departments who are using an
internship, service learning or capstone model for their senior
undergraduate classes.
Extensively revised and updated to serve today s needs for insight
and solutions to the most vexing ethical and regulatory problems
faced by researchers today, Planning Ethically Responsible
Research, Second Edition guides readers through one of the most
important aspects of their social or behavioral research: planning
ethically responsible research. Authors Joan E. Sieber and Martin
B. Tolich offer invaluable, practical guidance to researchers and
graduate students to understand ethical concerns within real-life
research situations, satisfy federal regulations governing human
research, and work with the university's Institutional Review Board
(IRB). The book includes an abundance of useful tools: detailed
instructions on development of an effective IRB protocol; methods
for handling issues of consent, privacy, confidentiality and
deception; ways to assess risk and benefit to optimize research
outcomes; and how to respect the needs of vulnerable research
populations.
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