Ethics in Qualitative Research and Evaluation

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Abstract

• Summary: The article approaches questions of research ethics with three emphases: first, the process of research; second, ethical questions raised by qualitative research; and third, precedent and stimulation from the work of writers outside the usual boundaries of social work. • Findings: The ethics of qualitative research design pose distinctive demands on principles of informed consent, confidentiality and privacy, social justice, and practitioner research. Fieldwork ethics raise special considerations regarding power, reciprocity and contextual relevance. Ethical issues raised by the analysis and dissemination of qualitative enquiry emphasize questions concerning narrative research, outcomes and justice, and the utilization of research. • Applications: Social work needs a culture of ethical awareness, a review of ethical approval, an awareness of the ethical issues posed by practitioners’ involvement in evaluative research, and an understanding of the ethical dimensions of different parts of the research process. © 2003, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

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Shaw, I. F. (2003). Ethics in Qualitative Research and Evaluation. Journal of Social Work, 3(1), 9–29. https://doi.org/10.1177/1468017303003001002

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