The role of development worker is a highly political one, and the research on which this article is based explored how such workers negotiated some of the ethical challenges of the job. The research adopted a methodology that, whilst psychoanaly- tically inspired, was also congruent with the democratic values and experiences of those who were being researched. The authors argue that the validity of the psycho-social method to some extent hangs on the capacity of the researcher to share his or her thinking with the interviewees and involve them in a joint process of sense-making. This is an important methodological innovation given that psycho-social approaches are sometimes criticised for being top-down.
CITATION STYLE
Hoggett, P., Beedell, P., Jimenez, L., Mayo, M., & Miller, C. (2010). Working psycho-socially and dialogically in research. Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society, 15(2), 173–188. https://doi.org/10.1057/pcs.2009.36
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