Whether they are working in peaceful Portugal, in war zones or even looking into their own family backgrounds, ethnographic researchers can face some sharp ethical and practical issues.
Such challenges were vividly explored at a seminar organised by the UKâs Society for Research into Higher Education, where scholars heard about the âdisjuncture between practical issues and debates about what counts as âproper researchââ â a point raised by Emily Henderson, an assistant professor at the University of Warwickâs Centre for Education Studies, who opened the event, titled âIn Depth and In Between?: Conducting Ethnographic Research on Higher Education across International Bordersâ.
One of the most obvious practical issues, in some environments, is sheer physical safety.
Adam Walton, a PhD student at the UCL Institute of Education, described his attempts to do âethnographically informed research in higher education institutions, initially in Afghanistan and then eventually in Turkeyâ.
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Since he spoke Uzbek, his initial plan had been to study âmasculinities in higher education institutions in the Uzbek-speaking areas of north Afghanistanâ. Yet just when he was preparing for an exploratory visit, he was told that his university didnât think it was safe for him to go there. This meant that he had to âjettison over two years of work and understanding of Afghanistan and start to explore alternative research sitesâ. The detainment of a researcher on the Tajik-Afghan border scuppered another possible option, so he was eventually forced to go to Turkey, a country where he didnât speak the language and about which he âwas in effect completely ignorantâ.
While the ârisk aversionâ of universities was âunderstandableâ, Mr Walton went on, it ânecessarily limit[ed] the locationsâ at which research can be carried out and often meant that the places that âarguably most need informed in-depth research insightsâ are turned into âno-go areasâ. In the event, during his time in Turkey, there were âseveral bomb attacks in my city, including one at the bus stop I used every day which killed two students from my case study institutionâ.
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Certain intellectual assumptions could also hamper ethnographic researchers.
Although academics are now âunder pressure to be âinternational in outlookââ, noted Maria do Mar Pereira, assistant professor of sociology at the University of Warwick, they often learned that some places are more far more valued that others.
Herself Portuguese, she had studied for a PhD at the London School of Economicsâ Gender Institute on âhow [Portuguese] academics demarcate the boundaries of what counts as proper knowledge, especially feminist knowledgeâ. Her countryâs position at âthe semi-periphery of the global academic worldâ had a major impact on the career prospects of Portuguese scholars who had not spent time or been published abroad. But it also affected how her own research was perceived.
Portugal, Professor Pereira discovered, was regarded as ânot international and exotic enoughâ by many anthropologists. But it was also seen as âa special case of limited interestâ, unlike the US and UK, where research was unlikely to generate âauthoritative knowledge which can be widely applied elsewhereâ.
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Another dilemma faced by ethnographic researchers was the question of how far they should draw directly on their own experience.
Jessica Gagnon, a research fellow at the University of Portsmouthâs School of Education and Childhood Studies, explored the challenges of âauto-ethnographyâ, which was often âmisunderstood as narcissistic and self-indulgentâ.
Her doctoral research had looked at âthe university experiences of the daughters of single mothers in the United Kingdomâ. Even Google searches soon revealed that single mothers were regularly dismissed as âeasyâ, âdesperateâ, âdisgustingâ and âbad for societyâ, or stereotyped as âbenefit scroungersâ and âwelfare queensâ. Many of her interviewees, Dr Gagnon discovered, had âinternalised [such] myths and then insisted they were not [an example] of themâ.Â
Since she is herself âa first-generation student from a working-class, American, single-mother familyâŠresearching within a country and cultural context different from my ownâ, she was both an insider and an outsider in relation to the topic.
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But that left open the question of how she should bring her own background into the research. She dismissed the notion that academic writing had to be âstale, sterile and boringâ and deliberately started her thesis with the words âI am illegitimateâ, as a way of opening up the question of âwho is considered legitimate within higher educationâ.
âI donât think my thesis would have been legitimate without my experience in it,â she added.
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