Difference between revisions of "Resource:Ea84de30-5f0c-4fc8-a57f-e61b53d03544"
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|Resource Type=Cases | |Resource Type=Cases | ||
|Title=The Art and Politics of Covert Research: Doing ‘Situated Ethics’ in the Field | |Title=The Art and Politics of Covert Research: Doing ‘Situated Ethics’ in the Field | ||
− | |Is About=. | + | |Is About=This article discusses the covert research relationship. Specifically, it explores the ethical dimensions of fieldwork with reference to a six-month covert ethnography of ‘bouncers’, in Manchester<ref>https://studysites.sagepub.com/dqr4/study/Student%20resources/Chapter%2010/Calvey.pdf</ref>. |
− | |Important Because=. | + | |Important Because=The standard discourse on ethics is abstracted from the actual doing, which is a mediated and contingent set of practices.Traditionally, professional ethics has been centralized around the doctrine of informed consent with covert methodology being frowned upon and effectively marginalized as a type of ‘last resort methodology’<ref>https://studysites.sagepub.com/dqr4/study/Student%20resources/Chapter%2010/Calvey.pdf</ref>. |
Revision as of 16:41, 29 April 2020
Resources
Cases
The Art and Politics of Covert Research: Doing ‘Situated Ethics’ in the Field
What is this about?
This article discusses the covert research relationship. Specifically, it explores the ethical dimensions of fieldwork with reference to a six-month covert ethnography of ‘bouncers’, in Manchester[1].
Why is this important?
The standard discourse on ethics is abstracted from the actual doing, which is a mediated and contingent set of practices.Traditionally, professional ethics has been centralized around the doctrine of informed consent with covert methodology being frowned upon and effectively marginalized as a type of ‘last resort methodology’[2].
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