Abstract

Obtaining ethics approval from university ethics committees is an important part of the research process in Australia and internationally. However, for researchers engaging in ethnographic work, obtaining ethics approval can (re)present significant hurdles to overcome in planning and facilitating a research project. In this article, we discuss potential challenges of reconciling the differences between institutional ethical review standards and the reality of ethnographic research. To do so, we reflect on our own experiences seeking ethics approval for a study on racialized visibility in rural nursing and another on the experiences of gender and sexuality diverse older women. We focus on two particular queries from ethics committees that reaffirm, for us, the incompatibility of biomedically informed ethics guidelines for naturalistic, ethnographic research. The article draws on four major points of contention regarding ethical approval processes designed for biomedical research and applied to social research. With respect to social research, these are (a) the associated risks, (b) predictive informed consent, (c) the power held by social researchers, and (d) biomedical emphasis on distance and universalism within the research relationship. This article suggests a reformulation of ethics guidelines and structures such that ethics committees are better able to engage with ethnographic (and other social) research. Although these debates and structural changes may not be relevant for all social or ethnographic research, exploring these ethical difficulties is paramount to redefining expectations and the positivist standards upon which social research is often measured.

Highlights

  • [E]thical guidelines and the institutional review system are prejudiced in favor of research methodologies that mimic epidemiology, and kindred “objective” approaches that deal with humans as detached social atoms

  • For researchers engaging in ethnographic work, obtaining ethics approval canpresent “significant hurdles to overcome in planning and facilitating a research project” (Davison, Brown, & Moffitt, 2008, p. 2)

  • Boards (IRBs) and ethnographic research seek to protect the participants of research, they operate on two diametrically opposed paths” (p. 279)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

[E]thical guidelines and the institutional review system are prejudiced in favor of research methodologies that mimic epidemiology, and kindred “objective” approaches that deal with humans as detached social atoms. Human Research Ethics Committees (HRECs), Institutional Review Board (IRB), informed consent, biomedical research, social research, ethnography

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call