While some scholars recommend to follow official channels when conducting social science research in contemporary China, it is also acknowledged that research permissions are not always necessary in a number of cases. However, as the boundary between sensitive (mingan) and insensitive issues is not always graspable a priori, and authorities’ control over particular objects or places can also intensify, fieldworkers may sometimes have to deal with relatively unexpected difficulties, writes Lisa Richaud
"Field research in China often requires the researcher to cooperate with two kinds of actors: resear...
In this contribution, Yunpeng Zhang responds to an earlier post by Qin Shao (see Building Trust and ...
There is no ‘orthodox’ research method in social sciences: there are just ‘different’ research metho...
While I was studying residents-turned-protesters against eviction in Shanghai, calculated risks and ...
Doing fieldwork inside the PRC is an eye-opening but sometimes also deeply frustrating experience. F...
I had always known that accessing government officials in China could be challenging. In my fieldwor...
One of the things that constantly surprised me during my fieldwork was the extent to which local inh...
My multiple roles as a friend and a researcher serve to explain the diversity of my behaviour under ...
One of the things that constantly surprised me during my fieldwork was the extent to which local inh...
This contribution offers intimate insights on entering the field, establishing relationships with re...
I planned to conduct fieldwork in rural China with the help of research assistants. I knew I needed ...
This paper contributes to a feminist politics of fieldwork by elevating narratives that have been pu...
Conducting ethnography in modern China can be highly fruitful, yet there are special-care items that...
• Explores methodological issues related to accompanied fieldwork.• Points not just to pitfalls but ...
Encountering officials is inevitable in many research projects in China. The encounter itself shows ...
"Field research in China often requires the researcher to cooperate with two kinds of actors: resear...
In this contribution, Yunpeng Zhang responds to an earlier post by Qin Shao (see Building Trust and ...
There is no ‘orthodox’ research method in social sciences: there are just ‘different’ research metho...
While I was studying residents-turned-protesters against eviction in Shanghai, calculated risks and ...
Doing fieldwork inside the PRC is an eye-opening but sometimes also deeply frustrating experience. F...
I had always known that accessing government officials in China could be challenging. In my fieldwor...
One of the things that constantly surprised me during my fieldwork was the extent to which local inh...
My multiple roles as a friend and a researcher serve to explain the diversity of my behaviour under ...
One of the things that constantly surprised me during my fieldwork was the extent to which local inh...
This contribution offers intimate insights on entering the field, establishing relationships with re...
I planned to conduct fieldwork in rural China with the help of research assistants. I knew I needed ...
This paper contributes to a feminist politics of fieldwork by elevating narratives that have been pu...
Conducting ethnography in modern China can be highly fruitful, yet there are special-care items that...
• Explores methodological issues related to accompanied fieldwork.• Points not just to pitfalls but ...
Encountering officials is inevitable in many research projects in China. The encounter itself shows ...
"Field research in China often requires the researcher to cooperate with two kinds of actors: resear...
In this contribution, Yunpeng Zhang responds to an earlier post by Qin Shao (see Building Trust and ...
There is no ‘orthodox’ research method in social sciences: there are just ‘different’ research metho...