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The politics of conducting research on depression in a cross-cultural context

The politics of conducting research on depression in a cross-cultural context
The politics of conducting research on depression in a cross-cultural context
Successful community engagement is often a crucial component of effective qualitative research. In this article we reflect on our experience of engaging with ethnic minority communities in a qualitative study of help seeking for depression. Community engagement emerges as a complex process that provides important insights into the way mental illness is constructed in various cultural contexts and from diverse perspectives. Contested notions of ethnicity, culture, community, and depression were the domains in which personal and public politics were played out. We worked with bilingual research assistants who provided an entrée to the community. Despite this, disparate community subgroups and influential individuals vied for input into and control of the research agenda. We conclude that negotiating the politics of these processes requires great reflexivity and is itself a powerful seam of data, adding richness to findings about the experience of mental distress in a community seeking to locate itself within mainstream society
1049-7323
708-717
Kokanovic, Renata
391314af-ae50-4a27-92c8-316e9a35fd88
Furler, John
05cd4ec9-53c0-46b5-9160-8b45cb3ab5b6
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Dowrick, Christopher
1869ad5e-1959-446c-b2a8-3fcdf3e79667
Herrman, Helen
3eb7f573-1102-4620-9162-3711533907cb
Evert, Helen
4d91935e-3b34-41d9-8d3e-0773062aa051
Gunn, Jane
0be5f1b1-2186-47aa-a84a-b835a47b1f05
Kokanovic, Renata
391314af-ae50-4a27-92c8-316e9a35fd88
Furler, John
05cd4ec9-53c0-46b5-9160-8b45cb3ab5b6
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Dowrick, Christopher
1869ad5e-1959-446c-b2a8-3fcdf3e79667
Herrman, Helen
3eb7f573-1102-4620-9162-3711533907cb
Evert, Helen
4d91935e-3b34-41d9-8d3e-0773062aa051
Gunn, Jane
0be5f1b1-2186-47aa-a84a-b835a47b1f05

Kokanovic, Renata, Furler, John, May, Carl, Dowrick, Christopher, Herrman, Helen, Evert, Helen and Gunn, Jane (2009) The politics of conducting research on depression in a cross-cultural context. Qualitative Health Research, 19 (5), 708-717. (doi:10.1177/1049732309334078).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Successful community engagement is often a crucial component of effective qualitative research. In this article we reflect on our experience of engaging with ethnic minority communities in a qualitative study of help seeking for depression. Community engagement emerges as a complex process that provides important insights into the way mental illness is constructed in various cultural contexts and from diverse perspectives. Contested notions of ethnicity, culture, community, and depression were the domains in which personal and public politics were played out. We worked with bilingual research assistants who provided an entrée to the community. Despite this, disparate community subgroups and influential individuals vied for input into and control of the research agenda. We conclude that negotiating the politics of these processes requires great reflexivity and is itself a powerful seam of data, adding richness to findings about the experience of mental distress in a community seeking to locate itself within mainstream society

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Published date: May 2009

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 163595
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/163595
ISSN: 1049-7323
PURE UUID: 9da4335b-be53-49b6-845b-bb467a2b3242
ORCID for Carl May: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0451-2690

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2010 13:56
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:06

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Contributors

Author: Renata Kokanovic
Author: John Furler
Author: Carl May ORCID iD
Author: Christopher Dowrick
Author: Helen Herrman
Author: Helen Evert
Author: Jane Gunn

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