Ethical regulation and visual methods: making visual research impossible or developing good practice?
Ethical regulation and visual methods: making visual research impossible or developing good practice?
The ethical regulation of social research in the UK has been steadily increasing over the last decade or so and comprises a form of audit to which all researchers in Higher Education are subject. Concerns have been raised by social researchers using visual methods that such ethical scrutiny and regulation will place severe limitations on visual research developments and practice. This paper draws on a qualitative study of social researchers using visual methods in the UK. The study explored their views, the challenges they face and the practices they adopt in relation to processes of ethical review. Researchers reflected on the variety of strategies they adopted for managing the ethical approval process in relation to visual research. For some this meant explicitly ‘making the case’ for undertaking visual research, notwithstanding the ethical challenges, while for others it involved ‘normalising’ visual methods in ways which delimited the possible ethical dilemmas of visual approaches. Researchers only rarely identified significant barriers to conducting visual research from ethical approval processes, though skilful negotiation and actively managing the system was often required. Nevertheless, the climate of increasing ethical regulation is identified as having a potential detrimental effect on visual research practice and development, in some instances leading to subtle but significant self-censorship in the dissemination of findings.
visual research, visual methods, ethics committees, ethical regulation, research governance, qualitative methods
Wiles, Rose
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Coffey, Amanda
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Robison, Judy
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Prosser, Jon
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28 February 2012
Wiles, Rose
5bdc597b-716c-4f60-9f45-631ecca25571
Coffey, Amanda
2607b24c-0c79-4ebb-b499-2d14b5666bcb
Robison, Judy
e39bf280-2265-431d-8935-0f528e99c812
Prosser, Jon
61c01963-93c1-4395-a387-f95d8912537e
Wiles, Rose, Coffey, Amanda, Robison, Judy and Prosser, Jon
(2012)
Ethical regulation and visual methods: making visual research impossible or developing good practice?
Sociological Research Online, 17 (1).
(doi:10.5153/sro.2274).
Abstract
The ethical regulation of social research in the UK has been steadily increasing over the last decade or so and comprises a form of audit to which all researchers in Higher Education are subject. Concerns have been raised by social researchers using visual methods that such ethical scrutiny and regulation will place severe limitations on visual research developments and practice. This paper draws on a qualitative study of social researchers using visual methods in the UK. The study explored their views, the challenges they face and the practices they adopt in relation to processes of ethical review. Researchers reflected on the variety of strategies they adopted for managing the ethical approval process in relation to visual research. For some this meant explicitly ‘making the case’ for undertaking visual research, notwithstanding the ethical challenges, while for others it involved ‘normalising’ visual methods in ways which delimited the possible ethical dilemmas of visual approaches. Researchers only rarely identified significant barriers to conducting visual research from ethical approval processes, though skilful negotiation and actively managing the system was often required. Nevertheless, the climate of increasing ethical regulation is identified as having a potential detrimental effect on visual research practice and development, in some instances leading to subtle but significant self-censorship in the dissemination of findings.
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Published date: 28 February 2012
Keywords:
visual research, visual methods, ethics committees, ethical regulation, research governance, qualitative methods
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Local EPrints ID: 178079
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/178079
ISSN: 1360-7804
PURE UUID: 3f3b3714-d2f2-418d-b33f-5aba6fb00505
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Date deposited: 24 Mar 2011 11:49
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:45
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Author:
Rose Wiles
Author:
Amanda Coffey
Author:
Judy Robison
Author:
Jon Prosser
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