Ethics does not equal law
Ethics does not equal law
There is an ongoing movement towards situated and relational, rather than static and transcendental, understandings of research ethics within Geography. Yet this tendency has not yet succeeded in destabilising a priori judgements of ethnographic engagements with unlawful spatial practices. As such, many socially and politically important projects are either sidelined or eschewed for fear of liability or complicity. In cases where ethnography is deployed, primarily in the field of participatory action research, the tensions between ethics and legality are not often explicitly engaged with. We want to suggest here, in light of increasing interest amongst geographers in “subversive” spatial practices, that ethnographies of illegality raise a range of important ethical concerns for research practices that also inform broader understandings of situated ethical frameworks. In this vein, the authors draw on past and ongoing ethnographic experiences into illicit spatial practices (or what criminologists have termed “edge ethnographies”) to think through the entire process of research engagement – from planning to data retention – with consideration to the incommensurable relationship between ethics and law where we take situated ethics seriously.
Dekeyser, Thomas
1d9c6f52-4273-45f6-850c-187f6a7447c9
Garrett, Bradley L
e51aa011-881c-4284-8889-124b1b52efc7
1 September 2018
Dekeyser, Thomas
1d9c6f52-4273-45f6-850c-187f6a7447c9
Garrett, Bradley L
e51aa011-881c-4284-8889-124b1b52efc7
Dekeyser, Thomas and Garrett, Bradley L
(2018)
Ethics does not equal law.
Area.
Abstract
There is an ongoing movement towards situated and relational, rather than static and transcendental, understandings of research ethics within Geography. Yet this tendency has not yet succeeded in destabilising a priori judgements of ethnographic engagements with unlawful spatial practices. As such, many socially and politically important projects are either sidelined or eschewed for fear of liability or complicity. In cases where ethnography is deployed, primarily in the field of participatory action research, the tensions between ethics and legality are not often explicitly engaged with. We want to suggest here, in light of increasing interest amongst geographers in “subversive” spatial practices, that ethnographies of illegality raise a range of important ethical concerns for research practices that also inform broader understandings of situated ethical frameworks. In this vein, the authors draw on past and ongoing ethnographic experiences into illicit spatial practices (or what criminologists have termed “edge ethnographies”) to think through the entire process of research engagement – from planning to data retention – with consideration to the incommensurable relationship between ethics and law where we take situated ethics seriously.
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Published - Ethics does not equal law
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Published date: 1 September 2018
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Local EPrints ID: 494541
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494541
ISSN: 0004-0894
PURE UUID: ced7e94f-b22f-43eb-9a77-8a3a0510c402
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Date deposited: 10 Oct 2024 16:37
Last modified: 11 Oct 2024 02:11
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Author:
Thomas Dekeyser
Author:
Bradley L Garrett
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