Children and young people's participation and non-participation in research
Children and young people's participation and non-participation in research
Cathy Murray considers the involvement of children and young people in research in the field of adoption and fostering in the UK, based on a review in 2004 of the Quality Protects bibliographic data-base. The database comprises details of 182 research studies conducted since 1991, of which 72 were categorised as relevant to adoption and fostering. Of these, 38 (53 per cent) involved children and young people in the process. Three aspects of participation and non-participation in research are considered. First, researchers' reasons for involving children and young people are outlined. Secondly, the role of gatekeepers is examined. When embarking on the review, it had been anticipated that ethical and methodological concerns would be the key challenges to involving children and young people in research. However, gatekeepers emerged from the research outputs as equally significant. It is argued that while gatekeeping is played out in specific research projects as an apparently individualised response, it reflects the pervasiveness of a protectionist model of children and young people over a citizen-with-rights model. Thirdly, the strategies that researchers employed to increase the likelihood of children and young people's participation are reported
children and young people, participation, non-participation, gatekeepers
57-66
Murray, Cathy
a7a1b99c-c260-4762-bdc2-123b74bdc2d3
April 2005
Murray, Cathy
a7a1b99c-c260-4762-bdc2-123b74bdc2d3
Murray, Cathy
(2005)
Children and young people's participation and non-participation in research.
Adoption and Fostering, 29 (1), .
Abstract
Cathy Murray considers the involvement of children and young people in research in the field of adoption and fostering in the UK, based on a review in 2004 of the Quality Protects bibliographic data-base. The database comprises details of 182 research studies conducted since 1991, of which 72 were categorised as relevant to adoption and fostering. Of these, 38 (53 per cent) involved children and young people in the process. Three aspects of participation and non-participation in research are considered. First, researchers' reasons for involving children and young people are outlined. Secondly, the role of gatekeepers is examined. When embarking on the review, it had been anticipated that ethical and methodological concerns would be the key challenges to involving children and young people in research. However, gatekeepers emerged from the research outputs as equally significant. It is argued that while gatekeeping is played out in specific research projects as an apparently individualised response, it reflects the pervasiveness of a protectionist model of children and young people over a citizen-with-rights model. Thirdly, the strategies that researchers employed to increase the likelihood of children and young people's participation are reported
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Published date: April 2005
Keywords:
children and young people, participation, non-participation, gatekeepers
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Local EPrints ID: 48084
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/48084
ISSN: 0308-5759
PURE UUID: 366b14ba-74b3-45e5-ab5d-0b2327ccd0c7
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Date deposited: 24 Aug 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:42
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Cathy Murray
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