Engaging human service practitioners as partners in research about sensitive areas of front-line work can be difficult for a range of reasons. Time constraints, geographic limitations, trust in the research relationship, issues of privacy, and fear of professional judgment are only some of the barriers that researchers need to overcome in order to assist workers to become involved in a reflective process about areas of practice. This article outlines the development of a new method of qualitative data collection designed to aid the reflective process and assist practitioners to engage in an ongoing dialogue about complex ethical dilemmas they had experienced in relation to their work with clients, colleagues, managers and organizations. The...
Our aim in this article is to discuss ethical reflections on research that uses a participatory meth...
Perils, Pitfalls & Reflexivity aims to stimulate solutions to qualitative challenges that researcher...
It is the intention of the authors’ to inform that there are rules of thumb that qualitative researc...
Engaging human service practitioners as partners in research about sensitive areas of front-line wor...
Summary: Consumer participation in decision making and evaluation of services has been a significant...
This article presents a reflective account of how and why the principles of Interpretative Phenomeno...
Research involving fieldwork can present the researcher with ethical dilemmas not anticipated in ins...
The methods, outcomes and distinct characteristics of qualitative research are presented to establis...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Ethics and Social Welf...
Participatory methodologies are frequently used in social research and have matured over the past de...
Social work, like many other practice-based professions, has historically been concerned about the d...
© 2014: Jane Palmer, Dena Fam, Tanzi Smith, Sarina Kilham, and Nova Southeastern University. Researc...
Using the child and family research arena as a base, and by generating and analysing empirical data ...
In this article the authors argue that the researcher reflective journal is a critical interpretive ...
As the use of qualitative inquiry increases within the field of social work, researchers must consid...
Our aim in this article is to discuss ethical reflections on research that uses a participatory meth...
Perils, Pitfalls & Reflexivity aims to stimulate solutions to qualitative challenges that researcher...
It is the intention of the authors’ to inform that there are rules of thumb that qualitative researc...
Engaging human service practitioners as partners in research about sensitive areas of front-line wor...
Summary: Consumer participation in decision making and evaluation of services has been a significant...
This article presents a reflective account of how and why the principles of Interpretative Phenomeno...
Research involving fieldwork can present the researcher with ethical dilemmas not anticipated in ins...
The methods, outcomes and distinct characteristics of qualitative research are presented to establis...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Ethics and Social Welf...
Participatory methodologies are frequently used in social research and have matured over the past de...
Social work, like many other practice-based professions, has historically been concerned about the d...
© 2014: Jane Palmer, Dena Fam, Tanzi Smith, Sarina Kilham, and Nova Southeastern University. Researc...
Using the child and family research arena as a base, and by generating and analysing empirical data ...
In this article the authors argue that the researcher reflective journal is a critical interpretive ...
As the use of qualitative inquiry increases within the field of social work, researchers must consid...
Our aim in this article is to discuss ethical reflections on research that uses a participatory meth...
Perils, Pitfalls & Reflexivity aims to stimulate solutions to qualitative challenges that researcher...
It is the intention of the authors’ to inform that there are rules of thumb that qualitative researc...