This article explores how reading focus group data ‘against the grain’ offers new insights into publics’, and especially marginalised groups’, negotiation of dominant discourses. Using data from a study with members of the UN Foundation’s Girl Up campaign in the UK, US and Malawi, I demonstrate that reading against the grain both across and within groups enabled me to explore the girls’ complex negotiations of girl power discourses in international development. I argue that reading focus group data against the grain involves paying attention both to wider social power relations, as is crucial to a poststructuralist discourse analysis, and to interactions between group members, a form of analysis more commonly associated with Conversation ...
Women and girls are currently positioned as highly visible subjects of global governance and develop...
This paper explores representations of girls in current discourses of neoliberal development through...
This article explores the possibility for researchers to embrace the unpredictability of focus group...
This article explores how reading focus group data ‘against the grain’ offers new insights into publ...
In recent years, scholars of girlhood studies focused their attention on the long-overlooked topic o...
This article offers new methodological directions for generating difficult-to-capture evidence on th...
Recent years have seen unprecedented interest in girls’ activism, and yet our understanding of their...
The United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up campaign has been criticised by many feminists for perpetuat...
In recent years there has been an increasing recognition that both the content of focus group discus...
This paper analyzes advocacy campaigns and research reports to demonstrate the construction of “the ...
This Testify article features a conversation about the emancipatory potentials and pitfalls of girls...
Following widespread use in political marketing and polling, focus groups are slowly gaining recogni...
This article explores the value of applying groupwork expertise and skills in conducting focus group...
This article comprises a critical reflection on our experiences of recruiting participants and organ...
This article traces the mounting interest in, and visibility of, girls and young women in developmen...
Women and girls are currently positioned as highly visible subjects of global governance and develop...
This paper explores representations of girls in current discourses of neoliberal development through...
This article explores the possibility for researchers to embrace the unpredictability of focus group...
This article explores how reading focus group data ‘against the grain’ offers new insights into publ...
In recent years, scholars of girlhood studies focused their attention on the long-overlooked topic o...
This article offers new methodological directions for generating difficult-to-capture evidence on th...
Recent years have seen unprecedented interest in girls’ activism, and yet our understanding of their...
The United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up campaign has been criticised by many feminists for perpetuat...
In recent years there has been an increasing recognition that both the content of focus group discus...
This paper analyzes advocacy campaigns and research reports to demonstrate the construction of “the ...
This Testify article features a conversation about the emancipatory potentials and pitfalls of girls...
Following widespread use in political marketing and polling, focus groups are slowly gaining recogni...
This article explores the value of applying groupwork expertise and skills in conducting focus group...
This article comprises a critical reflection on our experiences of recruiting participants and organ...
This article traces the mounting interest in, and visibility of, girls and young women in developmen...
Women and girls are currently positioned as highly visible subjects of global governance and develop...
This paper explores representations of girls in current discourses of neoliberal development through...
This article explores the possibility for researchers to embrace the unpredictability of focus group...