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Mathilde Léon; Shoba S. Meera; Anne-Caroline Fiévet; Alejandrina Cristia – Research Ethics, 2024
The last decade has seen a rise in big data approaches, including in the humanities, whereby large quantities of data are collected and analysed. In this paper, we discuss long-form audio recordings that result from individuals wearing a recording device for many hours. Linguists, psychologists and anthropologists can use them, for example, to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Data Collection, Audio Equipment
Tiago Rocha-Silva; Conceição Nogueira; Liliana Rodrigues – Research Ethics, 2024
Since its onset, scholars have characterized social media as a valuable source for data collection since it presents several benefits (e.g. exploring research questions with hard-to-reach populations). Nonetheless, methods of online data collection are riddled with ethical and methodological challenges that researchers must consider if they want…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Web Sites, Computer Mediated Communication, Social Media
Bamdad, Sara; Finaughty, Devin A.; Johns, Sarah E. – Research Ethics, 2022
Are social science, cross-border research projects, where recruitment and data collection are carried out remotely (e.g. through social media and online platforms), required to follow similar ethical and data-sharing procedures as 'on-the-ground' studies that use traditional means of recruitment and participant engagement? This article reflects on…
Descriptors: Ethics, Social Science Research, Social Media, Recruitment
Daniels, Benjamin; Boffa, Jody; Kwan, Ada; Moyo, Sizulu – Research Ethics, 2023
Simulated standardized patients (SPs) are trained individuals who pose incognito as people seeking treatment in a health care setting. With the method's increasing use and popularity, we propose some standards to adapt the method to contextual considerations of feasibility, and we discuss current issues with the SP method and the experience of…
Descriptors: Deception, Informed Consent, Simulation, Patients
Mahoney, Jamie; Le Louvier, Kahina; Lawson, Shaun; Bertel, Diotima; Ambrosetti, Elena – Research Ethics, 2022
The ubiquitous use of social platforms across the globe makes them attractive options for investigating social phenomena including migration. However, the use of social media data raises several crucial ethical issues around the areas of informed consent, anonymity and profiling of individuals, which are particularly sensitive when looking at a…
Descriptors: Social Media, Ethics, Informed Consent, Research Methodology
Sherwood, Gina; Parsons, Sarah – Research Ethics, 2021
The real-world navigation of ethics-in-practice versus the bureaucracy of institutional ethics remains challenging. This is especially true for research with children and young people who may be considered vulnerable by the policies and procedures of ethics committees but agentic by researchers. Greater transparency is needed about how this…
Descriptors: Informed Consent, Children, Adolescents, Social Science Research
Mackenzie, Erin; Berger, Nathan; Holmes, Kathryn; Walker, Michelle – Research Ethics, 2021
Adolescent populations have become increasingly accessible through online data collection methods. Online surveys are advantageous in recruiting adolescent participants and can be designed for adolescents to provide informed consent without the requirement of parental consent. This study sampled 338 Australian adolescents to participate in a low…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Adolescents, Adolescent Attitudes, Science Education
Kaplan, Lennart; Kuhnt, Jana; Picot, Laura E.; Grasham, Catherine Fallon – Research Ethics, 2023
Across disciplines there is a large and increasing number of research projects that rely on data collection activities in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). However, these are accompanied by an extensive range of ethical challenges. While the safeguarding of study participants is the primary aim of existing ethics guidelines, this paper…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Ethics, Barriers, Researchers
Vuban, Joyce Afuh; Eta, Elizabeth Agbor – Research Ethics, 2019
This article argues that localizing access -- a general ethical principle -- is a workable strategy that can be used in approaching participants in qualitative research across disciplines and in coping with respective institutional practices in order to collect meaningful data. This article is based on the autobiographical, lived experiences of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, Data Collection, Field Studies
Gomez, Pablo; Anderson, Autumn R.; Baciero, Ana – Research Ethics, 2017
In the past decade there has been a lot of attention to the quality of the evidence in experimental psychology and in other social and medical sciences. Some have described the current climate as a 'crisis of confidence'. We focus on a specific question: how can we increase the quality of the data in psychology and cognitive neuroscience…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Psychology, Neurosciences, Data
Taylor, Joanna; Pagliari, Claudia – Research Ethics, 2018
Background: Data representing people's behaviour, attitudes, feelings and relationships are increasingly being harvested from social media platforms and re-used for research purposes. This can be ethically problematic, even where such data exist in the public domain. We set out to explore how the academic community is addressing these challenges…
Descriptors: Social Media, Research Methodology, Ethics, Guidelines
Willis, Roxana – Research Ethics, 2019
Informed consent may be unobtainable in online contexts. This article examines the difficulties of obtaining informed consent online through a Facebook case study. It is proposed that there are at least two ways informed consent could be waived in research: first, if the data are public, and second, if the data are textual. Accordingly, the…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Social Science Research, Social Media, Informed Consent
van Baalen, Sebastian – Research Ethics, 2018
Information communications technologies (ICTs) like laptops, smartphones and portable storage devices facilitate travel, communication and documentation for researchers who conduct fieldwork. But despite increasing awareness about the ethical complications associated with using ICTs among journalists and humanitarians, there are few reflections on…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Internet, Ethics, Information Security
Maglio, Fabiana; Pherali, Tejendra – Research Ethics, 2020
This paper aims to reflect upon ethical dilemmas arising from educational research in humanitarian contexts, particularly when involving children. In recognition of the paucity of knowledge on how to define ethics in humanitarian research, we review the existing body of literature that explores ethical responsibilities towards children involved in…
Descriptors: Ethics, Children, Educational Research, Participatory Research
Pickles, James – Research Ethics, 2018
A research project was conducted which explored LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) hate crime. Participants were invited to share their narratives and personal experiences of hate crime, discrimination and violence through semi-structured interviews. The study helped us understand how people who experience 'hate' responded to, managed and…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Social Bias, Crime, Research Methodology

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