In this paper, reflections on research relationships in a qualitative longitudinal (QL) project are provided from a relational perspective, in which agency is understood to be interdependent and evolving. All reflections are based on a study involving repeated interviews over nine years with young people who have experienced secure care, which is the most intrusive form of intervention for troubled youths in Swedish child welfare. Methodological QL research emphasizes the importance of the relationships between the researcher and participants, and an understanding of time and place as interdependent. Here, complexities in research relationships over time and the effects of repeated research encounters on the understanding of time are explor...
Whilst educational researchers often explore lived experiences relative to time, dominant approaches...
Questions about change in social and personal life are a feature of many accounts of the contemporar...
Qualitative researchers who conduct in-depth interviews with vulnerable participants may experience ...
In this paper, reflections on research relationships in a qualitative longitudinal (QL) project are ...
Abstract: This article introduces and describes Timescapes: Changing Relationships and Identities Th...
First published Open Access under a Creative Commons license as What is Qualitative Longitudinal Res...
There is growing interest in the potential value of qualitative longitudinal research (QLR) for shed...
Qualitative longitudinal research is experiencing something of a surge of interest in the social sci...
Abstract There is a growing interest in the potential value of qualitative longitudinal research for...
This working paper brings together papers presented at a symposium entitled Intensity and insight: q...
In this symposium, we explore ways of understanding and researching relationships and relationalitie...
Background: The researcher role is highly debated in qualitative research. This article concerns the...
In this article, we address data interrelations that social researchers face when workingwith qualit...
In 2000 data from a little known sociological study was ‘re-discovered’, stored in an attic office. ...
In this article, we discuss how co-research – two researchers working together at each stage of the ...
Whilst educational researchers often explore lived experiences relative to time, dominant approaches...
Questions about change in social and personal life are a feature of many accounts of the contemporar...
Qualitative researchers who conduct in-depth interviews with vulnerable participants may experience ...
In this paper, reflections on research relationships in a qualitative longitudinal (QL) project are ...
Abstract: This article introduces and describes Timescapes: Changing Relationships and Identities Th...
First published Open Access under a Creative Commons license as What is Qualitative Longitudinal Res...
There is growing interest in the potential value of qualitative longitudinal research (QLR) for shed...
Qualitative longitudinal research is experiencing something of a surge of interest in the social sci...
Abstract There is a growing interest in the potential value of qualitative longitudinal research for...
This working paper brings together papers presented at a symposium entitled Intensity and insight: q...
In this symposium, we explore ways of understanding and researching relationships and relationalitie...
Background: The researcher role is highly debated in qualitative research. This article concerns the...
In this article, we address data interrelations that social researchers face when workingwith qualit...
In 2000 data from a little known sociological study was ‘re-discovered’, stored in an attic office. ...
In this article, we discuss how co-research – two researchers working together at each stage of the ...
Whilst educational researchers often explore lived experiences relative to time, dominant approaches...
Questions about change in social and personal life are a feature of many accounts of the contemporar...
Qualitative researchers who conduct in-depth interviews with vulnerable participants may experience ...