Abstract

The involvement of children in research studies is historically fraught with difficulties. Experiments on children without their consent or knowledge have been carried out in the past and thus the need for stringent ethical control is undoubtedly necessary. However this paper argues that the need to protect children from unethical research has somehow become entwined in the web of secrecy that surrounds the very nature of child abuse. In the name of ‘protection’ are children in danger of not having their voice heard? In the foreword to ‘Listening to Children’ (Alderson, 1995) Roger Singleton writes, ‘much research is carried out on and about children, but seldom with children. Children themselves are often strangely silent’. This paper draws on recent literature on the institutional abuse of young people in residential care and the lack of voice that those abused in residential care have traditionally had, suggesting that their silence is not ‘strange’ but perhaps contrived. This paper does not repeat the work of Alderson (1995) and make suggestions as to how research with children may best be carried out, but seeks to address the issues in relation to research with children who are in institutions.

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