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Peer reviewedCameron, Deborah; And Others – Language and Communication, 1993
Discusses "Researching Language," a full-length study dealing with questions about power and method in a range of social science disciplines, including anthropology, sociology, and sociolinguistics. The discussion asks whether the balance of power between researchers and research subjects can be altered. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedBecker, Lawrence C. – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments on a previous article that deals with questions on researching language, and suggests that the assumption driving the arguments contained in that article is that social scientists typically possess a power-advantage over their research subjects. It is argued that such an assumption is implausible. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedFigueroa, Esther – Language and Communication, 1993
Responds to an article dealing with issues of method in researching language, and addresses the question "what is research and why are linguists doing research?" (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedGiles, Howard – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research. It is suggested that the research approach highlighted in the article has indisputable merit, but that the blueprint is vague and difficult to know when to put into practice. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedHarre, Rom – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research. It is suggested that the previous article does not succeed in bridging the gap between moral and metasocial considerations concerning the use of knowledge and similar considerations concerning mode of acquisition. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedHowe, Kate – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research, recognizing the admirable motives advocated in the methodology put forth in the article and suggesting the need to address additional issues. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedMuhlhausler, Peter – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research. It is suggested that the method of empowering research subjects can go seriously wrong and that no linguistic research can be driven by ideas of empowering or disempowering alone. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedRamazanoglu, Caroline – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedRickford, John R. – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedSchiffrin, Deborah – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. This comment suggests that understanding research talk can be facilitated by knowing something about the larger group of speech activities of which it is but one normal representative form. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedToolan, Michael – Language and Communication, 1993
Comments to a previous article focusing on power and method in linguistic research or more specifically on empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedCameron, Deborah; And Others – Language and Communication, 1993
Responds to various positive and negative comments on an article focusing on power and method in linguistic research and describing a method for empowering research participants. (VWL)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Empowerment, Ethics, Language Research
Peer reviewedBroadhead, Lee-Anne; Howard, Sean – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 1998
Uses an analysis based on the work of M. Foucault to explore the nature and practice of disciplinary power in the context of higher education in the United Kingdom (U.K.), focusing on the Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) undertaken by the U.K. Higher Education Funding Councils. The lack of impact of the RAE is examined. (SLD)
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Power Structure
Peer reviewedMoore, Simon – New Jersey Journal of Communication, 1997
Applies M. Foucault's account of power-discourse and its relationship to its owners to aspects of late 19th/early 20th centuries, when new technologies have multiplied the capacity of power-discourse to intervene in lives. Identifies industrial urban crowd as a target for discourse; considers this conjunction in light of Foucault's theories.…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, Power Structure
Peer reviewedAnderson, Judy; Hoy-Mack, Penny; Ross, Catherine – New Zealand Journal of Adult Learning, 2000
Presents three perspectives on power in an adult education course--learner, teacher, and manager--that illustrate how, regardless of role, each holds multiple positions in power relationships. Discusses power issues in terms of democratic teaching practices, language, and culture. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Adults, Experiential Learning, Power Structure


