Abstract

Interviewing different groups involves different challenges and opportunities. Older persons living in extreme poverty are among those who warrant special methodological considerations. Building on the experiences of life-history interviews with extreme poor older persons in Bangladesh, this article contributes with a methodological reflection on the interview process from the start to the end. The article highlights the key practical, emotional, and ethical concerns that impact the interview process. Adopting an activist approach, it asserts that offering additional power and (or) agency to poor and vulnerable participants yields more benefit to research. The article challenges the traditional consent-seeking process as it remains short of protecting the participants fully. Period of silence appears to be crucial in interviews for which a researcher should devise schemes on how to manage and analyze silence as a non-textual interview content. The paper stresses on the need to frame plans and protocols for the researchers themselves as they can be exposed to mental, physical, or social harm. It recommends reformulation of the idea of accountability toward the research participants in relation to incentivisation, dissemination and reporting back to the community. Understanding all such nuances and careful dealing of micro-ethical aspects are crucial to succeed in an interview. The article can be particularly beneficial for early-stage researchers who conduct interviews with people living in extreme poverty, as it makes them more aware and prepared to deal with the possible challenges inherent in different stages of the interview process.

Highlights

  • Demographic projections have confirmed that more older persons are expected to live in developing countries (Kohli et al, 2020; Lloyd-Sherlock, 2000; Shetty, 2012)

  • While we usually have guidelines and intervention framework for broader ethical issues normally agreed through Institutional Review Board (IRB) to safeguard research participants (Kubanyiova, 2008), for unanticipated and micro ethical aspects we are often left without guidance

  • They were placed under different headings based on the sequence in which they emerged during the interviews

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Summary

Introduction

Demographic projections have confirmed that more older persons are expected to live in developing countries (Kohli et al, 2020; Lloyd-Sherlock, 2000; Shetty, 2012) This exposes them to life in conditions of extreme poverty, marginalization, and vulnerability in absence or lack of proper policy response and erosion in the traditional forms of support structure. I became gradually entangled in many questions and concerns that kept me occupied for a long time Some of those were: How does one handle the situation in an ethically sound manner when the interview becomes too much emotional? The article will be especially beneficial to novice, emerging, and/or early career researchers who rely on interviews to collect data It may be insightful for those who are concerned with research on ageing and poverty in developing societies

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