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The term 'sensitive research' is applied to a wide range of issues
and settings. It is used to denote projects that may involve risk
to people, stigmatising topics, and/or require a degree of
sensitivity on behalf of the researcher. Rather than take the
notion of 'sensitive research' for granted, this collection unpacks
and challenges what the term means. This book is a collective
endeavour to reflect on research practices around 'sensitive
research', providing in-depth explorations about what this label
means to different researchers, how it is done - including the need
to be sensitive as a researcher - and what impacts this has on
methods and knowledge creation. The book includes chapters from
researchers who have explored a diverse range of research topics,
including sex and sexuality, death, abortion, and learning
disabilities, from several disciplinary perspectives, including
sociology, anthropology, health services research and
interdisciplinary work. The researchers included here collectively
argue that current approaches fail to adequately account for the
complex mix of emotions, experiences, and ethical dilemmas at the
heart of many 'sensitive' research encounters. Overall, this book
moves the field of 'sensitive research' beyond the genericity of
this label, showing ways in which researchers have in practice
addressed the methodological threats that are triggered when we
uncritically embark on 'sensitive research'. The chapters in this
book were originally published in the International Journal of
Social Research Methodology and the journal Mortality.
This practical book covers issues related to suicide risk,
prevention and postvention in Higher and Further Education
communities. Compiled by 37 experts, it is an authoritative guide
to an issue that is causing increasingly large concern for FE and
HE institutions and covers multiple evidence-backed approaches with
a pragmatic focus. It is the first that specifically deals with
student suicide in FE Colleges and universities, encouraging a
holistic, institutional response. Chapters are split into three
sections, beginning with understanding and preventing student
suicide among students, followed by responses to risk, including a
model for student prevention in HE settings. The book concludes
with the response to student death by suicide with advice on
postvention, and how to support bereaved family, staff, and
students.
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