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Alice Cavolo; Daniel Pizzolato – Research Ethics, 2025
Artificial placentas (APs) are technologies that mimic the human placenta to treat extremely preterm infants. Being an invasive and risky technology, it will raise important ethical questions for human trials. Hence, in this Topic Piece we provide a blueprint of further issues to investigate. First, counselling will have the double role of…
Descriptors: Human Body, Physiology, Pregnancy, Decision Making
Davies, Hugh – Research Ethics, 2022
Consent is one necessary foundation for ethical research and it's one of the research ethics committee's major roles to ensure that the consent process meets acceptable standards. Although on Oxford 'A' REC (an NHS Research Ethics Committee based in the UK) we've been impressed by the thought and work put into this aspect of research ethics, we've…
Descriptors: Ethics, Informed Consent, Research, Foreign Countries
Destiny Peterson – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2025
This paper provides an extensive literature review of current approaches to sexual consent and demonstrates their insufficiency for teaching higher education students about healthy sex. Their overemphasis on the giving of consent to the detriment of attention to the process of gaining consent, as well as their inappropriate utilisation of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Sex Education, Sexuality, Consent
Davies, Hugh; Munday, Rosie; O'Reilly, Maeve; Hamilton, Catriona Gilmour; Ardahan, Arzhang; Kolstoe, Simon E.; Gillies, Katie – Research Ethics, 2023
Research consent processes must provide potential participants with the necessary information to help them decide if they wish to join a study. On the Oxford 'A' Research Ethics Committee we've found that current research proposals mostly provide adequate detail (even if not in an easily comprehensible format), but often fail to support decision…
Descriptors: Research, Informed Consent, Participation, Decision Making
Kalista Peña – Tribal College Journal of American Indian Higher Education, 2025
Native nations have long proven their resilience against the odds, consistently paving a path forward and exercising their sovereign rights as autonomous, self-governing peoples. As the world embarks upon an increasingly digital age, Indigenous peoples face a new threat: datafication. Datafication is "turning nearly every aspect of human life…
Descriptors: Minority Serving Institutions, Tribally Controlled Education, Tribal Sovereignty, Data Use
Galende-Domínguez, Inés; Rivero-Lezcano, Octavio M. – Research Ethics, 2023
Progress in precision medicine is being achieved through the design of clinical trials that use genetic biomarkers to guide stratification of patients and assignation to treatment or control groups. Genetic analysis of biomarkers is, therefore, essential to complete their objectives, and this involves the study of biological samples from donor…
Descriptors: Genetics, Medical Research, Patients, Ethics
Helen Hendry; Eleonora Teszenyi; Lucy Rodriguez-Leon; Mary-Louise Maynes; Jane Dorrian; Tracey Edwards – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2025
Research in early childhood settings requires careful consideration of the impact on all children in the setting, whether participants or non-participants, and evolving ethical approaches in response to children's needs. However, flexible approaches and, 'in the moment', ethical adaptations are not routinely reported as part of early childhood…
Descriptors: Ethics, Prediction, Educational Research, Early Childhood Education
Mari-Liisa Parder; Pieter Gryffroy; Marten Juurik – Research Ethics, 2024
The growing importance of researching online activities, such as cyber-deviance and cyber-crime, as well as the use of online tools (e.g. questionnaires, games, and other interactive tools) has created new ethical and legal challenges for researchers, which can be even more complicated when researching adolescents. In this article, we highlight…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Crime Prevention, Ethics, Computer Security
Katherine Yaw; Luke Plonsky; Tove Larsson; Scott Sterling; Merja Kytö – Language Teaching, 2023
For many researchers in the social sciences, including those in applied linguistics, the term ethics evokes the bureaucratic process of fulfilling the requirements of an ethics review board (e.g., in the US, an Institutional Review Board, or IRB) as a preliminary step in conducting human subjects research. The expansion of ethics review boards…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Ethics, Research Methodology, Social Sciences
Nicole K. Rendos; Christopher M. Wilburn – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2025
The academic field of exercise science has experienced exponential growth in the past four decades, including in the number of degrees awarded, available job opportunities for graduates, amount of research conducted, and external funding for research. Typically, exercise science students are young, healthy adults, with an inherent interest in…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Exercise Physiology, College Students, Research Methodology
Stinne Glasdam; Katharina Ó. Cathaoir; Sigrid Stjernswärd – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2025
International research collaborations engage multiple countries, researchers, and universities. This enhances the magnitude of contextual challenges, including legal and ethical dimensions across various jurisdictions, that must be bridged in qualitative research regardless of discipline, also in the construction of informed consents. From a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Legal Problems, Ethics, Informed Consent
Lareau, Annette; Rao, Aliya Hamid – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
There is a dearth of methodological guidance on how to conduct participant observation in private spaces such as family homes. Yet, participant observations can provide deep and valuable data about family processes. This article draws on two ethnographic studies of family life in which researchers conduct in-depth interviews, recruit families, and…
Descriptors: Family Life, Observation, Ethnography, Research Methodology
Data Quality Campaign, 2025
State leaders have a responsibility to use their data systems to help students seamlessly navigate transitions from high school into college, workforce training programs, the military, and apprenticeships. Many state leaders are meeting this responsibility by establishing initiatives to make enrolling in postsecondary education and workforce…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Data Use, Sharing Behavior, Privacy
Jones, David Gareth – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2023
Concerns have recently been expressed about the continuing availability of human bones from India, obtained originally for educational purposes but lacking the requisite informed consent that would be expected today. More generally, a broader claim is being made, namely, that the practice of using any unconsented bones in educational settings is…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Human Body, Ethics, Undergraduate Study
Borgström, Åsa – Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, 2023
Conducting qualitative research on young people with intellectual disability and the Internet poses methodological challenges as well as opportunities. Based on memos from a qualitative study, this article focuses on identified gaps related to the challenges of informed consent, access to Internet arenas and using stimulus materials.…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disability, Informed Consent, Internet, Researchers

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