Dangerous FieldworkSAGE Publications, 1995 - 86 sidor Researchers sometimes work in settings which are potentially dangerous to their health and safety. For example, they can be vulnerable to violent confrontation, verbal abuse or infectious diseases. This volume explores the contexts, settings and situations which pose high physical risk to the fieldworker, and presents the strategies the author has developed for reducing the risks. Raymond Lee draws on his own experience in Northern Ireland, as well as on the work of other researchers with groups such as outlaw bikers and youth gangs, drug addicts and informants in inherently dangerous occupations. Dangerous Fieldwork also offers valuable information on the increasingly important topic of sexual harassment. |
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Sida 22
... researcher's trustworthiness . Potentially damaging information is made available to see whether it finds its way into the wrong hands . Conceivably , tests of this kind are used to confirm the researcher's trustworthiness , rather than ...
... researcher's trustworthiness . Potentially damaging information is made available to see whether it finds its way into the wrong hands . Conceivably , tests of this kind are used to confirm the researcher's trustworthiness , rather than ...
Sida 57
... researchers . Golde does not see this in an entirely negative light . In her view , communal solicitousness toward the ... researcher's actions and limiting her freedom to maneuver . Nor is social control operating under the guise of ...
... researchers . Golde does not see this in an entirely negative light . In her view , communal solicitousness toward the ... researcher's actions and limiting her freedom to maneuver . Nor is social control operating under the guise of ...
Sida 61
... researchers , it was possible to stay in a particular area longer and thus collect more data . Although the areas she worked in posed very clear dangers to the researcher's physical security , Milroy does not mention the possibility of ...
... researchers , it was possible to stay in a particular area longer and thus collect more data . Although the areas she worked in posed very clear dangers to the researcher's physical security , Milroy does not mention the possibility of ...
Innehåll
Research on Violent Social Conflict | 14 |
DrugRelated Violence | 39 |
Gangs and Outlaws | 48 |
Upphovsrätt | |
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academic activities Adler Alevy amphetamine anthropologists areas argues arrested assault avoid Basque Belfast Bettelheim bikers Bourgois Brewer carried conflict situations confront contexts cope covert research culture dangerous settings dangerous situations deviant difficult disease drug ethical ethnographers ethnographic research example experience face fear female researchers field research field staff fieldwork gang members Gilmore Goffman groups health and safety Howell Howell's Inciardi incident informed consent instance intelligence interviews involved Jankowski Jenkins kind Klatch London malaria McKeganey ment Nash neutral Newbury Park Northern Ireland observation organizations outlaw biker Papua New Guinea particular Peritore police officers political potential hazards potentially dangerous problems Project Camelot protection psychological qualitative research relations research participants researcher's responsibility risks role safety issues sexual sexual harassment Sluka social research social scientists sociology sometimes strategies stresses suggests survivalists tion University violent social conflict Williams workers Yancey & Rainwater Zulaika
Hänvisningar till den här boken
Designing Qualitative Research Catherine Marshall,Gretchen B. Rossman Begränsad förhandsgranskning - 2006 |