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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri

Time: 11:40 am

Results for qualitative research

2 results found

Author: Goldstein, Daniel M.

Title: Qualitative Research in Dangerous Places: Becoming an Ethnographer of Violence and Personal Safety

Summary: Conducting qualitative research is a challenge in any environment, but in highly violent settings the obstacles to both successful outcomes and researcher safety are especially high. Not only are the usual problems that confront qualitative researchers intensified when fear and insecurity add to local people's tendency to mistrust strangers asking questions; environments marked by high levels of criminal, political, and/or daily social violence require researchers to be constantly alert to threats to their own physical safety, and to the ways in which their research can imperil their subjects and collaborators. While some dangers will be obvious, such as people firing guns or waving knives, they may include more subtle things as well, like being in the wrong place at the wrong time, witnessing an activity one shouldn't, asking the wrong question of the wrong person, revealing the extent of one's personal resources and equipment, or inadvertently violating the unwritten codes that govern violent areas. Extreme caution is needed, not only when doing research, but when carrying out the daily business of living and working as well. Qualitative researchers working in highly violent settings confront the same risks and dangers that the inhabitants must confront on a regular basis. And like the people who are often the subjects of their research inquiries, researchers must learn how to keep themselves safe in places where violence is always a possibility. One effective way to do this is to adopt the local cultural and linguistic norms their subjects use to promote their own security. In other words, researchers, regardless of discipline, can become "ethnographers" of local violence and the responses it engenders and emulate the behaviors their informants have learned to keep themselves safe.

Details: Brooklyn, NY: Social Science Research Council, Drugs, Security and Democracy Program, 2014. 21p.

Source: Internet Resource: DSD Working Papers on Research Security: No. 1: Accessed September 10, 2014 at: http://webarchive.ssrc.org/working-papers/DSD_ResearchSecurity_01_Goldstein.pdf

Year: 2014

Country: Indonesia

URL: http://webarchive.ssrc.org/working-papers/DSD_ResearchSecurity_01_Goldstein.pdf

Shelf Number: 133258

Keywords:
Criminal Justice Research
Ethnographies
Qualitative Research
Violence
Violent Areas

Author: Institute for Public Safety, Crime and Justice, University of Northampton

Title: Home Office Police Front Line Review 2018/2019: Key Themes in Qualitative Research Projects with Police Forces in England and Wales, Appendix I

Summary: This paper provides a high-level overview of the methodologies used in the qualitative research undertaken with police forces that informed the paper. The key themes outlined in the paper are drawn from the findings of qualitative data collection and analysis across 11 projects completed between June 2016 and January 2019. 10 of the 11 projects underwent ethical review and clearance with the University of Northampton Research Ethics Committee and 1 project was reviewed and cleared by the University of Leicester Research Ethics Committee. Each of the projects adheres to the same data protection legislation and protocol; in particular, all participants were given information about their involvement in the research and gave their informed consent. Data is held securely in encrypted files in the systems administered by the University of Northampton, only accessible by the researchers named in each project. The project reports are confidential; however, forces have agreed to the findings being used to inform academic, policy and practice improvement, with assurances of anonymity in publicly available documents. A brief description of each project methodology is provided below. For the purpose of informing the Front Line Review with qualitative insights, the findings from qualitative data and analysis was used, and the quantitative results were not.

Details: Northampton, England: Institute for Public Safety, Crime and Justice, University of Northampton, 2019. 4p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed August 12, 2019 at: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/815801/Qual-Research-Summary_IPSCJ_Front-Line-Review_Appendix-I.pdf

Year: 2019

Country: United Kingdom

URL: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/front-line-policing-review

Shelf Number: 156975

Keywords:
Police Forces
Police Officers
Police Staff
Policing
Qualitative Research