Abstract

Responding to the Special Issue call by the Qualitative Social Work: Research and Practice Journal, this article reflects on the challenges faced by a Social Work doctoral student at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland) during the Covid-19 outbreak. Having already commenced their fieldwork through a series of Freirean-style dialogical interviews via Biographical Narrative Interpretive Method (B.I.N.M.), the nationwide-lockdown demanded a drastic deviation from the intended in-person face-to-face interviews with lone parent participants. Significant academic consideration had already been given to the researcher’s existing academic, professional, and social relationships to north and northwest Edinburgh - the geographical focus within the study - via a process of reflexivity prior to commencing the interviews, yet the shift from discussions in neutral venues (e.g. community centres and public cafes) to dialogues conducted exclusively via digital platforms brought about a radical shift in interpersonal dynamics as both researcher and participant were exposed to each other’s homes, families, and other aspects of domestic life. The change in circumstances bore major implications not only for participant recruitment, but also created an unexpected intimacy within the interviewer-interviewee relationships.

Highlights

  • Produced for the Special Issue of the Qualitative Social Work: Research and Practice Journal, this article, written by a doctoral student at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland), offers insight into contemporary fieldwork research experiences during the Covid-19 outbreak

  • This article, reflects on the shift in recruitment approach and interview process from in-person face-to-face dialogues to engaging in exclusively digital spaces, detailing the impact this had on the interactions and relationships established between the researcher and the research participants

  • What has become obvious through these online dialogues is that witnessing each other’s homes and unintentionally encountering members of their family, created an unintended intimacy between the researcher and the participants

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Summary

Introduction

Produced for the Special Issue of the Qualitative Social Work: Research and Practice Journal, this article, written by a doctoral student at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland), offers insight into contemporary fieldwork research experiences during the Covid-19 outbreak.

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