Researching researchers: lessons for research ethics
Researching researchers: lessons for research ethics
There is widespread debate about ethical practice in social research with most social researchers arguing that situational relativist approaches are appropriate for resolving the ethical issues that emerge. In this article, we draw on research conducted on an ESRC-funded study of informed consent in social research to explore the ethical issues that are raised when conducting research with one’s peers. The study involved conducting focus groups and telephone interviews with academic and non-academic researchers. The ethical issues emerging from the study related to consent, data ownership and the management of confidentiality and anonymity. Participants’ responses to these issues and the ways that we managed them are discussed. We conclude by exploring the implications of this study for research more generally and argue that the increased regulation of research needs to enable researchers to attend reflexively to the social context in which consent takes place
confidentiality, informed consent, peer research, research ethics
283-299
Wiles, Rose
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Charles, Vikki
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Crow, Graham
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Heath, Sue
f4df85b4-fdde-4353-8641-08a4b9fbbcae
1 August 2006
Wiles, Rose
5bdc597b-716c-4f60-9f45-631ecca25571
Charles, Vikki
d0c792df-7763-43a0-a73b-1d9212243982
Crow, Graham
723761e4-bba1-4eba-9672-e7029f547fce
Heath, Sue
f4df85b4-fdde-4353-8641-08a4b9fbbcae
Wiles, Rose, Charles, Vikki, Crow, Graham and Heath, Sue
(2006)
Researching researchers: lessons for research ethics.
Qualitative Research, 6 (3), .
(doi:10.1177/1468794106065004).
Abstract
There is widespread debate about ethical practice in social research with most social researchers arguing that situational relativist approaches are appropriate for resolving the ethical issues that emerge. In this article, we draw on research conducted on an ESRC-funded study of informed consent in social research to explore the ethical issues that are raised when conducting research with one’s peers. The study involved conducting focus groups and telephone interviews with academic and non-academic researchers. The ethical issues emerging from the study related to consent, data ownership and the management of confidentiality and anonymity. Participants’ responses to these issues and the ways that we managed them are discussed. We conclude by exploring the implications of this study for research more generally and argue that the increased regulation of research needs to enable researchers to attend reflexively to the social context in which consent takes place
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Published date: 1 August 2006
Keywords:
confidentiality, informed consent, peer research, research ethics
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Local EPrints ID: 40739
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40739
ISSN: 1468-7941
PURE UUID: 69eff874-1e20-4266-a08f-79fce2995a62
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Date deposited: 10 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:22
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Contributors
Author:
Rose Wiles
Author:
Vikki Charles
Author:
Graham Crow
Author:
Sue Heath
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