Table of Contents
1. Introduction (Michael Adorjan and Rose Ricciardelli)
Part I: Institutional Arrangements & Positionality
2. Ethics Creep: Governing Social Science Research in the Name of Ethics (Kevin Haggerty)
3. The Ethical Imagination - Reflections on conducting research in Hong Kong (Michael Adorjan)
4. Ethics, Politics and the Limits to Knowledge (Pat Carlen)
Part II: Trust and Research with Vulnerable Populations
5. A History of Coercive Practices: The Abuse of Consent in Research involving Prisoners and Prisons in the United States (Mark Israel)
6. Indigenous Peoples, Research and Ethics (Maggie Walter)
7. Ethics as Witnessing: ‘Science’, Research Ethics, and Victimization (Dale Spencer)
Part III: Research on and with Police
8. Navigating Research Relationships: Academia and Criminal Justice Agencies (Erin Gibbs Van Brunschot)
9. Commanding Officer, faculty member, and student: Auto-ethnographic experiences of academic-police collaborative partnerships (Rose Ricciardelli, Laura Huey, Hayley Crichton, and Tracy Hardy)
10. Criminologizing Everyday Life and Doing Policing Ethnography in China (Jianhua Xu)
Part IV: Emerging Areas
11. Carceral Tours and Missed Opportunities: Revisiting conceptual, ethical and pedagogical dilemmas (Justin Piché, Kevin Walby and Craig Minogue)
12. Illuminating the Dark Net: Methods and Ethics in Cryptomarket Research (James Martin)
13. Conclusion (Rose Ricciardelli and Michael Adorjan)