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Inclusive Ethnography -

Inclusive Ethnography

Making Fieldwork Safer, Healthier and More Ethical
Buch | Softcover
232 Seiten
2024
SAGE Publications Ltd (Verlag)
978-1-5296-2002-3 (ISBN)
CHF 64,55 inkl. MwSt
Challenges in ethnographic fieldwork are ubiquitous, yet rarely discussed. This book breaks the silence on these issues and, in revisiting ethnography through the lens of diversity, equity and inclusion, seeks to better equip researchers in conducting fieldwork that is safe for them and their research participants.
How can you do ethnographic field research in a safe way for you and the people you work with?

In this nuanced, candid book, researchers from across the globe discuss core challenges faced by ethnographers, reflecting on research from preparation to dissemination and how identity interacts with the realities of doing fieldwork.

Building on the work of the editors’ The New Ethnographer Project, which has been seeking to change the way ethnographic methods are approached and taught since 2018, the book:



Promotes an inclusive approach that invites you to learn from the challenges faced by a diverse range of scholars.
Addresses underexplored issues including emotional and physical safety in the face of ableism, homophobia and racism.
Challenges assumptions of what it means to produce knowledge by conducting fieldwork.

Whether you’re an undergraduate student or an experienced researcher, this book will help you do fieldwork that is safer, healthier and more ethical.

Dr Caitlin Procter is a part-time Professor at the Migration Policy Centre at the European University Institute, and a Marie Sklodowska-Curie Research Fellow at the Centre on Conflict, Development and Peacebuilding at the Geneva Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies. Her work examines the experiences of children and youth in contexts of conflict and forced displacement, with a regional focus on Palestine, Jordan and Syria. She teaches on research methods and ethics and is a co-founder of The New Ethnographer. Dr Branwen Spector is a Lecturer in Social Anthropology at University College London. She conducts research on occupation, mobility, and infrastructure in the Occupied Palestinian West Bank, Ukraine, and Lebanon. She teaches on research methods, ethics, social media, and decolonisation and is a co-founder of The New Ethnographer.

Introduction
Chapter 1: Ethnographic skills to keep you sane - Isobel Gibbin
Chapter 2: Safe and Ethical Ethnography: Looking Inwards - Elena Butti
Chapter 3: Cybersecurity and ethnography - James Shires
Chapter 4: Giving, taking and receiving care: Disability and fieldwork - Isabel Bredenbröker and Tajinder Kaur
Chapter 5: Reflexive ethnography in intimate spaces: Motherhood and care work in and outside of the field - Elsemieke Van Osch and Sharon Louise Smith
Chapter 6: Fieldwork as a Coded-As-Black Woman - Sandra Fernandez
Chapter 7: Sex, sexuality and the ethnographer in the field - Shannon Philip
Chapter 8: Betraying Loyalty: Managing Dis/Trust as Ethical Feminist Praxis - Hareem Khan
Chapter 9: Social Media as Method - Branwen Spector and Theodora Sutton
Chapter 10: Doing fieldwork in and on contexts of violence and instability - Caitlin Procter
Chapter 11: Fieldwork and Feeled-Work: Addressing Mental Health in Ethnography - Emma Louise Backe and Alex Fitzpatrick
Chapter 12: Participatory Ethnographic Methods: Collaborative data production, analysis, and ethnographic representation - Anne E. Pfister
Chapter 13: Going against the Grain in Writing Ethnography - Ezgi Güler
Concluding recommendations for educators

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 170 x 242 mm
Gewicht 410 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Empirische Sozialforschung
ISBN-10 1-5296-2002-3 / 1529620023
ISBN-13 978-1-5296-2002-3 / 9781529620023
Zustand Neuware
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