A clash of methodology and ethics in "undercover" social science
Article Abstract:
The criticism on methodological and ethical grounds, the undercover or 'covert' approach to fieldwork continues to be a useful technique in certain settings, however, questions remain about the credibility of the published findings from such work. It is found that an attempt by researchers to prove their study as beneficial to greater peer investigation can place subjects at risk of unwanted notoriety or even danger.
Publication Name: Philosophy of the Social Sciences
Subject: Social sciences
ISSN: 0048-3931
Year: 2003
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Interpretive social science and the "native's point of view": a close look
Article Abstract:
The interpretive approach to anthropological research has gained increased popularity since the 1970s. The interpretive approach advocates the study of human beings based on humanities rather than social science concepts. It is argued that the interpretive approach gained support due to a loss of faith in conventional social scientific approaches which involve emulating the methods and techniques of natural sciences.
Publication Name: Philosophy of the Social Sciences
Subject: Social sciences
ISSN: 0048-3931
Year: 1998
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Research ethics and the interpretive stance in fieldwork
Article Abstract:
T. Jones has charged "interpretive social science" with violation of ethical principles, but the issue is complex. Topics discussed include the interpretivist as trickster, rhetorical responsibility, and the morality of arbitrariness.
Publication Name: Philosophy of the Social Sciences
Subject: Social sciences
ISSN: 0048-3931
Year: 2001
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Scenarios of technology and innovation policies in Europe: investigating future governance. The role of quality standards in innovative service companies: an empirical analysis for Germany
- Abstracts: The effect of common and unique features in consumer choice. When thinking beats doing: the role of optimistic expectations in goal-based choice
- Abstracts: Ethical issues for North American anthropologists conducting research in Mexico: the national dimension. Anthropologists, development, and situated truth
- Abstracts: Recognition without ethics? Violence and the scientific vocation. Conflict as a vocation: Carl Schmitt and the possibility of politics
- Abstracts: The acquisition of firm technological capabilities in Mexico's open economy, the case of vitro. Learning from variety and competition between technological options for generating photovoltaic electricity