Engaging with Ethics in International Criminological Research

Engaging with Ethics in International Criminological Research

Engaging with Ethics in International Criminological Research

Engaging with Ethics in International Criminological Research

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Overview

Despite a voluminous literature detailing the procedures of research ethics boards and institutional ethical review processes, there are few texts that explore the realpolitik of conducting criminal research in practice. This book explores the unique lived experiences of scholars engaging with ethics during their criminological research, and focuses on the ethical dilemmas that researchers encounter both in the field and while writing up results for publication. Who benefits from criminological research? What are the roles and impacts of ethics review boards? How do methodological and theoretical decisions factor in to questions of ethical conduct and research ethics governance?

This book is divided into four parts:

  • Part I, Institutional arrangements and positionality, explores the ongoing and expanding process of ethics protocol and procedures, principles of confidentiality, and the positionality of the researcher.
  • Part II, Trust and research with vulnerable populations, examines the complexity of work involving prisoners, indigenous peoples and victims of extreme violence, power dynamics between researchers and participants, and the challenges of informed consent.
  • Part III, Research on and with police, reflects on the importance of transparent relations with police, best practices, and the consequences of undertaking research in authoritarian contexts.
  • Part IV, Emerging areas, scrutinizes the ethics of carceral tours and suggests possible alternatives, and offers one of the first sociological and criminological examinations of dark net cryptomarkets.

Drawing upon the experiences of international experts, this book aims to provoke further reflection on and discussion of ethics in practice. This book is ideal for students undertaking courses on research methods in criminology, as well as a key resource for criminology researchers around the world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781317382874
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 06/10/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 258
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Michael Adorjan is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Calgary, Canada, and Fellow with the Centre for Criminology, University of Hong Kong, China.

Rose Ricciardelli is Associate Professor at Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada.

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)

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