Carrying out research in areas controlled by armed actors requires an ongoing process of negotiation along a series of different axes. Permission from these non?state groups is essential in order to have access to the communities they dominate, yet independence from them is also fundamental to the integrity of the research. External research engages in negotiations which mirror the compromises that residents make on a daily basis. This briefing note traces the process of negotiating access with militias and drug dealers for research to take place in Rio's favelas. The challenge throughout these negotiations was demonstrating enough flexibility to appear not to be a threat, while at the same time maintaining the neutrality of the research....
This thesis examines the emergence and sustainment of milícias (militias) in the 1990s in the West Z...
The freedom to consent to participate in medical research is a complex subject, particularly in soci...
This paper explores the challenges the researcher faced when undertaking ethnographic fieldwork with...
The chapter reflects on the unintended consequences of fieldwork in polarised soc...
An important dimension of the research process in the case of Rio de Janeiro's favelas was linking...
Using participatory approaches within violent contexts calls for special attention to be paid to a r...
All anthropological research, including student projects, involves dilemmas concerning informed cons...
Establishing contacts and gaining permission to conduct ethnographic or qualitative research can be ...
Questions of research ethics are raised when deliberative research is done in war situations
Examining Rio de Janeiro's milícias (‘militias’) through a ‘coercive brokerage’ concept can reveal h...
The realization of the need for community consent, or more accurately community permission, for rese...
The present study provides an autoethnographic account of the efforts to gain field access to a poli...
This thesis provides the first empirical explanatory theory for community authorization for Genetica...
Since 1996, Brazil has an anti-AIDS programme that offers universal and free access to antiretrovira...
Conducting research in violent environments poses particular challenges for researchers and particip...
This thesis examines the emergence and sustainment of milícias (militias) in the 1990s in the West Z...
The freedom to consent to participate in medical research is a complex subject, particularly in soci...
This paper explores the challenges the researcher faced when undertaking ethnographic fieldwork with...
The chapter reflects on the unintended consequences of fieldwork in polarised soc...
An important dimension of the research process in the case of Rio de Janeiro's favelas was linking...
Using participatory approaches within violent contexts calls for special attention to be paid to a r...
All anthropological research, including student projects, involves dilemmas concerning informed cons...
Establishing contacts and gaining permission to conduct ethnographic or qualitative research can be ...
Questions of research ethics are raised when deliberative research is done in war situations
Examining Rio de Janeiro's milícias (‘militias’) through a ‘coercive brokerage’ concept can reveal h...
The realization of the need for community consent, or more accurately community permission, for rese...
The present study provides an autoethnographic account of the efforts to gain field access to a poli...
This thesis provides the first empirical explanatory theory for community authorization for Genetica...
Since 1996, Brazil has an anti-AIDS programme that offers universal and free access to antiretrovira...
Conducting research in violent environments poses particular challenges for researchers and particip...
This thesis examines the emergence and sustainment of milícias (militias) in the 1990s in the West Z...
The freedom to consent to participate in medical research is a complex subject, particularly in soci...
This paper explores the challenges the researcher faced when undertaking ethnographic fieldwork with...