The focus of this paper is on how international Social Work research can respond to critiques of western Social Science research with Third World women. Drawing on recent fieldwork experiences with young women in Mozambique, it examines the power relationships that are inherent in the ‘give and take’ between researchers and participants. Questions such as ‘who gave what?’ and ‘who took what?’ are at the forefront of its concerns. Although the research resulted in minimal material benefit for the participants, the two-way exchange documented builds a more complex picture than one in which participants do all of the ‘giving’ and researchers all the ‘taking’. The paper concludes by suggesting that while the ‘Southern’ context compels particula...
Judith Buhendwa Nshobole reflects on the relationship between the donor-researcher and the recipient...
Somewhere underneath the prose of social science lies some human contact. Before the clatter of the ...
While reflecting on her own experience with giving back in Zimbabwe, Fortmann considers how the idea...
In this article we problematize the dualistic and binary model of researcher/researched interaction ...
This paper explores the micro-level operations of power where researchers speak within, rather than ...
Abstract This paper explores the micro-level operations of power where researchers speak within, rat...
This research note is part of the thematic section, Limits to Giving Back, in the special issue titl...
The model of Participatory Research (PR) has been used for a long time in the field of social resear...
The ‘relational turn’ in social research raises many issues that might loosely be collected together...
The project of this special issue emerged from the guest editors' experiences as field researchers i...
How to deal with the relationship between the researcher and the ‘researched ’ is crucial thing in d...
Cross-cultural research frequently involves working with research assistants to conduct data collect...
This article explores the relationships among social work, feminist theory and ethnography in the co...
A single story of trauma has dominated Western psychological meaning making of displaced women’s exp...
There is growing demand for robust evidence to address complex social phenomena such as violence aga...
Judith Buhendwa Nshobole reflects on the relationship between the donor-researcher and the recipient...
Somewhere underneath the prose of social science lies some human contact. Before the clatter of the ...
While reflecting on her own experience with giving back in Zimbabwe, Fortmann considers how the idea...
In this article we problematize the dualistic and binary model of researcher/researched interaction ...
This paper explores the micro-level operations of power where researchers speak within, rather than ...
Abstract This paper explores the micro-level operations of power where researchers speak within, rat...
This research note is part of the thematic section, Limits to Giving Back, in the special issue titl...
The model of Participatory Research (PR) has been used for a long time in the field of social resear...
The ‘relational turn’ in social research raises many issues that might loosely be collected together...
The project of this special issue emerged from the guest editors' experiences as field researchers i...
How to deal with the relationship between the researcher and the ‘researched ’ is crucial thing in d...
Cross-cultural research frequently involves working with research assistants to conduct data collect...
This article explores the relationships among social work, feminist theory and ethnography in the co...
A single story of trauma has dominated Western psychological meaning making of displaced women’s exp...
There is growing demand for robust evidence to address complex social phenomena such as violence aga...
Judith Buhendwa Nshobole reflects on the relationship between the donor-researcher and the recipient...
Somewhere underneath the prose of social science lies some human contact. Before the clatter of the ...
While reflecting on her own experience with giving back in Zimbabwe, Fortmann considers how the idea...