This article describes how during ethnographic research in Sierra Leone, I was working with people who were used to telling stories of violence about how they got their impairments, which I perceived as ethically problematic and exploitative. I explain how those stories are becoming linked to a post-conflict culture of dependency, patronage and payment. In this context, I explain some of the ethical limitations and struggles I encountered and why, in order to align my research to the community's wants and needs, it was important to engage in more reciprocal and collaborative communal research. I used a social model of disability framework to try and access discourses that the community were using to advocate their issues, and explain some o...
This paper is based on the experiences drawn from a long-term social science research programme on t...
Following calls from both disability studies and anthropology to provide ethnographic accounts of di...
In this article, we question narrative inquiry's predominant ethics of benefit when engaging in narr...
In 2013 I was invited by Edward Conteh, the head of the Amputee and War-Wounded Association (AWWA) i...
The more roles the ethnographer occupies in relation to his/her informants the more likelihood that ...
Disability is a form of difference that is created when the social participation of someone with an ...
The economic and epistemological dominance of the global North has outlived colonialism. This postco...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Anthropology. American UniversityMy work engages links between notions of disa...
In this article I argue that an ethnographic approach has a contribution to make to the analysis of ...
This chapter begins with an ethnographic contribution from post-Ebola Sierra Leone, illustrating how...
This article takes stock of the insights and approaches advanced by the last 15 years of critical re...
This participatory ethnography examines the experiences of four women and one of their male partners...
The use of multimedia story making and drama based narrative in disability health research raises co...
The growing involvement of anthropologists in medical humanitarian response efforts has laid bare th...
In 1999 we began research, funded by the ‘Thomas Pocklington Trust’, to explore the opinions of visu...
This paper is based on the experiences drawn from a long-term social science research programme on t...
Following calls from both disability studies and anthropology to provide ethnographic accounts of di...
In this article, we question narrative inquiry's predominant ethics of benefit when engaging in narr...
In 2013 I was invited by Edward Conteh, the head of the Amputee and War-Wounded Association (AWWA) i...
The more roles the ethnographer occupies in relation to his/her informants the more likelihood that ...
Disability is a form of difference that is created when the social participation of someone with an ...
The economic and epistemological dominance of the global North has outlived colonialism. This postco...
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Anthropology. American UniversityMy work engages links between notions of disa...
In this article I argue that an ethnographic approach has a contribution to make to the analysis of ...
This chapter begins with an ethnographic contribution from post-Ebola Sierra Leone, illustrating how...
This article takes stock of the insights and approaches advanced by the last 15 years of critical re...
This participatory ethnography examines the experiences of four women and one of their male partners...
The use of multimedia story making and drama based narrative in disability health research raises co...
The growing involvement of anthropologists in medical humanitarian response efforts has laid bare th...
In 1999 we began research, funded by the ‘Thomas Pocklington Trust’, to explore the opinions of visu...
This paper is based on the experiences drawn from a long-term social science research programme on t...
Following calls from both disability studies and anthropology to provide ethnographic accounts of di...
In this article, we question narrative inquiry's predominant ethics of benefit when engaging in narr...