This article offers insights into the ethics of engagement and methodological issues and dilemmas in cross-cultural interpretation for researchers who are positioned at different points of the insider-outsider spectrum. The discussion uses examples from qualitative research with Sikh families in Britain and focuses on the design of the methodology and co-interpretation of data from in-depth interviews, both during the interactive data gathering phase and the post-interview analysis and interpretation phase. The researchers represent differing degrees of insider-outsiderness in relation to the British Sikh community; one is a cultural insider (a Sikh) whilst the other is an outsider (non-Sikh). In other respects they share a number of cha...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleDrawing on findings from an ethnographic study of Romani ...
This article highlights key theoretical and methodological issues and implications of being an insid...
Researchers, particularly those using qualitative methodologies, often position themselves as ‘insid...
This presentation examines the issues relating to insiderness and outsiderness within the qualitativ...
The aim of my article is to confront the insider/outsider dichotomy with the present state of cultur...
This paper is a think/opinion piece on researcher positioning in near-to-practice research. I argue ...
© Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. In this article, we reflect on the concept of the insider and the o...
A substantial literature has developed within the humanities and social sciences about ‘insider rese...
This article examines the superficial and deep ethical and moral dilemmas confronting ‘insider’ rese...
Qualitative researchers are expected to engage in reflexivity, whereby they consider the impact of t...
Emic and etic perspectives are consequential for research because they impact the research process, ...
A commonsense problematic positions comparative researchers as either inside or outside cultures, or...
In this article, I examine some of the methodological issues present for minority scholars when cond...
With the proliferation of taught research degrees over the last few years, the number of people unde...
As qualitative researchers, what stories we are told, how they are relayed to us, and the narratives...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleDrawing on findings from an ethnographic study of Romani ...
This article highlights key theoretical and methodological issues and implications of being an insid...
Researchers, particularly those using qualitative methodologies, often position themselves as ‘insid...
This presentation examines the issues relating to insiderness and outsiderness within the qualitativ...
The aim of my article is to confront the insider/outsider dichotomy with the present state of cultur...
This paper is a think/opinion piece on researcher positioning in near-to-practice research. I argue ...
© Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. In this article, we reflect on the concept of the insider and the o...
A substantial literature has developed within the humanities and social sciences about ‘insider rese...
This article examines the superficial and deep ethical and moral dilemmas confronting ‘insider’ rese...
Qualitative researchers are expected to engage in reflexivity, whereby they consider the impact of t...
Emic and etic perspectives are consequential for research because they impact the research process, ...
A commonsense problematic positions comparative researchers as either inside or outside cultures, or...
In this article, I examine some of the methodological issues present for minority scholars when cond...
With the proliferation of taught research degrees over the last few years, the number of people unde...
As qualitative researchers, what stories we are told, how they are relayed to us, and the narratives...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleDrawing on findings from an ethnographic study of Romani ...
This article highlights key theoretical and methodological issues and implications of being an insid...
Researchers, particularly those using qualitative methodologies, often position themselves as ‘insid...