The chapter reflects on the unintended consequences of fieldwork in polarised societies, which may affect the autonomy of both the researcher and the researched. In a context of past violence and intractable conflict, research participants often have concerns about how the research impacts the autonomy of their daily life by potentially compromising their safety. On the other hand, research participants may try to make use of the researcher for their own political and economic objectives, compromising the autonomy of the project. In analysing the simultaneous empowerment and disempowerment of research participants, the chapter builds on fieldwork conducted in rural Mozambique on community mobilization against insurgent vi...
This paper explores the paradoxes of carrying out research into rural development, drawing on experi...
Drawing on examples from rural Ethiopia and Uganda, this research note highlights some of the diffic...
Violent contexts are not “normal” research settings; they involve abuses, power disparities, and col...
The chapter reflects on the unintended consequences of fieldwork in polarised soc...
Item does not contain fulltextCan fieldwork still be done in today’s most violent warzones? We conte...
Research on fieldwork methods in Peace and Conflict Studies has often tended to examine the tools th...
Despite genuine efforts for contemporary research on the global South to include more participatory ...
Carrying out research in areas controlled by armed actors requires an ongoing process of negotiation...
This Open Access book offers a synthetic reflection on the authors’ fieldwork experiences in seven c...
Building on an emerging scholarly literature that discusses methodological issues related to the saf...
How should social researchers be spending their time in contexts where resources are scarce? In divi...
This article discusses the merits and challenges of qualitative-interpretive research into violent c...
The existing transdisciplinary research scholarship contains numerous examples of how political cont...
Violence, democracy and rights are issues that are not fully addressed in research methodology liter...
In recent decades there has been increasing attention to mass atrocities such as genocide, war crime...
This paper explores the paradoxes of carrying out research into rural development, drawing on experi...
Drawing on examples from rural Ethiopia and Uganda, this research note highlights some of the diffic...
Violent contexts are not “normal” research settings; they involve abuses, power disparities, and col...
The chapter reflects on the unintended consequences of fieldwork in polarised soc...
Item does not contain fulltextCan fieldwork still be done in today’s most violent warzones? We conte...
Research on fieldwork methods in Peace and Conflict Studies has often tended to examine the tools th...
Despite genuine efforts for contemporary research on the global South to include more participatory ...
Carrying out research in areas controlled by armed actors requires an ongoing process of negotiation...
This Open Access book offers a synthetic reflection on the authors’ fieldwork experiences in seven c...
Building on an emerging scholarly literature that discusses methodological issues related to the saf...
How should social researchers be spending their time in contexts where resources are scarce? In divi...
This article discusses the merits and challenges of qualitative-interpretive research into violent c...
The existing transdisciplinary research scholarship contains numerous examples of how political cont...
Violence, democracy and rights are issues that are not fully addressed in research methodology liter...
In recent decades there has been increasing attention to mass atrocities such as genocide, war crime...
This paper explores the paradoxes of carrying out research into rural development, drawing on experi...
Drawing on examples from rural Ethiopia and Uganda, this research note highlights some of the diffic...
Violent contexts are not “normal” research settings; they involve abuses, power disparities, and col...