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Showing all 14 results Save | Export
Britton, Jennifer; Johnson, Hugh P. – Metropolitan Universities, 2023
Academic and government-directed research is generally portrayed as a benign problem-solving enterprise. There is a long record of important theories, discoveries, and solutions to sticky problems that research has produced. But alongside this list of important advances in knowledge, there has been a record of damage to individuals and to…
Descriptors: Place Based Education, Environmental Research, Ethics, Risk
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Wood, Lesley; Kahts-Kramer, Samantha – Research Ethics, 2023
Many reviewers of applications for ethical approval of research at universities struggle to understand what is considered ethical conduct in community-based research (CBR). Their difficulty in understanding CBR and the ethics embedded within it is, in part, due to the exclusion of CBR from researchers' mandatory research ethics training. After…
Descriptors: Ethics, Misconceptions, African American Community, Foreign Countries
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Lorinda M. N. M. Riley; Jessica P. Kaneakua – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2024
Indigenous people are often hesitant to participate in research projects because they lack trust in researcher intentions. In this article, we explore the critical role that Indigenous boundary spanners play in research conducted with Indigenous communities through our research on oceans and human health. Our analysis centers around five…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Trust (Psychology), Interpersonal Relationship, Experimenter Characteristics
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Raffaella Ravinetto; Joyce Adhiambo; Joshua Kimani – Research Ethics, 2024
Research represents an essential component of the response to infectious disease outbreaks and to other public health emergencies, whether they are localised, of international concern, or global. Research conducted in such contexts also comes with particular ethics challenges, the awareness of which has significantly grown following the Ebola…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Ethics, Emergency Programs, COVID-19
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Elisabeth Moore – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2023
This paper delves into the innovative use of the potluck, or "pa'ina," as a metaphor to reimagine a research approach aimed at fostering collective understanding between non-Indigenous knowledge seekers and Indigenous knowledge guardians in Indigenous contexts. By embracing the broader context of research, this metaphor strives to create…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Pacific Islanders, Community Involvement, School Community Relationship
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Wilson, Elena; Kenny, Amanda; Dickson-Swift, Virginia – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2018
Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) has been proposed as an equitable, empowering partnership approach to collaborative research. International literature about the ethical implications of CBPR suggests a continuing strong interest in the topic. However, there is a notable lack of research that captures the "experience" of…
Descriptors: Ethics, Participatory Research, Community Involvement, Research Problems
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Vakil, Sepehr; McKinney de Royston, Maxine; Suad Nasir, Na'ilah; Kirshner, Ben – Cognition and Instruction, 2016
Participatory design-based research continues to expand and challenge the "researcher" and "researched" paradigm by incorporating teachers, administrators, community members, and youth throughout the research process. Yet, greater clarity is needed about the racial and political dimensions of these collaborative research…
Descriptors: Race, Power Structure, Participatory Research, Trust (Psychology)
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Stellefson, Michael; Paige, Samantha R.; Alber, Julia M.; Barry, Adam E.; James, Delores – American Journal of Health Education, 2015
"The Belmont Report" was written in 1979 to address the abuse of human participants in biomedical research. In the report, three ethical principles were described: (1) "beneficence," which describes an act of charity or kindness that maximizes possible benefits while minimizing possible harms; (2) "justice," described…
Descriptors: Health Education, Educational Research, Ethics, Community Involvement
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Hudson, Maui – International Social Science Journal, 2009
Ethical review is an integral part of the process of developing research and considering issues associated with the production of knowledge. It is part of a system that primarily legitimises western traditions of inquiry and reinforces western assumptions about knowledge and its benefit to society. Around the world the process of colonisation has…
Descriptors: Committees, Community Involvement, Foreign Countries, Ethics
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Schinke, Robert J.; Hanrahan, Stephanie J.; Eys, Mark A.; Blodgett, Amy; Peltier, Duke; Ritchie, Stephen Douglas; Pheasant, Chris; Enosse, Lawrence – Quest, 2008
When sport psychology researchers from the mainstream work with people from marginalized cultures, they can be challenged by cultural differences as well as mistrust. For this article, researchers born in mainstream North America partnered with Canadian Aboriginal community members. The coauthors have worked together for 5 years. What follows is…
Descriptors: Canada Natives, Cultural Differences, Sport Psychology, Researchers
Hermes, Mary – 1997
This essay is an attempt to continue the reflective element that was a part of a dissertation based on a study of the development of a culturally relevant curriculum in a tribal school. As a reflective retrospection on the anthropological research methodology, it examines the intersection of academic research traditions, the traditions of the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Anthropology, Community Involvement, Cooperation
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New, Peter Kong-Ming; Hessler, Richard M. – Human Organization, 1973
Three community studies were catalysts for researchers and residents to generate discussions on: (1) strategies and ethics of community research; (2) problems of ethics, including considerations for a code and comments on community involvement; and (3) recommendations for establishing a technical research consultation service'' in the Society for…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Community Study, Ethics, Research Criteria
Hochheimer, John L. – 1983
Despite widespread indifference or resistence to the idea, communication scientists need to discuss the ethical implications of their research. Fortunate in being able to conduct research, scientists are responsible to and for the larger population in whose names they do their work. They need to realize that such traditional research areas and…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Community Involvement, Ethical Instruction, Ethics
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Oandasan, William – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1981
The National Endowment for the Humanities' Code of Ethics for research of Native Americans, based on the Indian Religious Freedom Act (P.L. 95-561, 1978) and the National Historic Preservation Act (P.L. 96-515), is a model for awarding research grants. The Code will stimulate improved relations between scholars and Native Americans. (LC)
Descriptors: American Indians, Civil Rights, Codes of Ethics, Communication (Thought Transfer)