Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to consider the challenges, advantages and limits of ethnographical approaches to the study of parliament. Challenges in the study of political institutions emerge because they can be fast-changing, difficult to gain access to, have starkly contrasting public and private faces and, in the case of national parliaments, are intimately connected to rest of the nation.Design/methodology/approachEthnography usually tends to be difficult to plan in advance, but especially so when parliament is the focus.FindingsResearch in parliament requires clear questions but an emergent approach for answering them – working out your assumptions, deciding on the most appropriate methods depending on what wish to find out, and continually reviewing progress. Its great strengths are flexibility, ability to encompass wider historical and cultural practices into the study, getting under the surface and achieving philosophical rigour. Rigour is partly achieved through reflexivity.Research limitations/implicationsOne implication of this is that not only will each study of parliament be different, because each is embedded in different histories, cultures, and politics, but the study of the same parliament will contain variations if a team is involved.Originality/valueEthnographical research is a social and political process of relating; interpreting texts, events and conversations; and representing the “other” as seen by observers.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this paper is to consider the challenges, advantages and limits of ethnographical approaches to the study of parliament

  • Since ethnographers have turned their gaze to cultures, groups or organisations “at home”, and boundaries between groups have blurred with globalisation, so the geopolitics of ethnography has been reconceptualised

  • As Tim Ingold (2014) points out, ethnography is not just fieldwork, it involves writing about people evocatively: In thickening our descriptions, and allowing a real historical agency to the people who figure in them, we might want to qualify the sense in which these accounts could be considered to be scientific

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Summary

Introduction

The purpose of this paper is to consider the challenges, advantages and limits of ethnographical approaches to the study of parliament. This offers a structured way of researching the performative relationships between politicians and others that suggests more meaningful categories of social action, meaning and process across them.

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