scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Confronting Collaboration: Dilemmas in an Ethnographic Study of Health Policy Makers

Serena Heckler, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2008 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 1, pp 14-21
TLDR
In this paper, the authors report on collaborative, ethnographic research investigating the first regional tobacco control office in the U.K. and some of the dilemmas it poses.
Abstract
In this article we report on collaborative, ethnographic research investigating the first regional tobacco control office in the U.K. and some of the dilemmas it poses. The ideal of collaboration is fully realisable in this setting, where the participants are both eager and qualified to contribute meaningfully to the project. However, the fulfilment of such an ideal poses its own problems. For example, the educational level and professional expertise of some participants allows them to fully engage with the theoretical framework to the extent that they could, if allowed, rewrite manuscripts. Other issues are more subtle, such as how to establish appropriate boundaries between the researcher and the tobacco control office staff. We suggest that the collaborative research model presupposes differentials of power, education and culture between researchers and participants that do not necessarily apply in the case of research in such settings. Where these differentials are lacking, the field is open for dominant participants to assume ‘undue influence’ over the research project. To prevent this, we have reinstated boundaries between object and subject that were originally dissolved as part of the collaborative model. As a result, our project is maintaining a delicate balance between the conflicting aims of objectivity and collaboration.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Being embedded: A way forward for ethnographic research

TL;DR: At a time when ethnography is seen to be at risk from strictures placed upon it by ethics approval procedures and the like, it is increasingly valued by the wider public as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethnography, methodological autonomy and self-representational space: a reflexive millennial generation of Muslim young men

TL;DR: Within British schools over the last few decades, we have witnessed a policy move from multi-culturalism to counter-radicalization as discussed by the authors, and we have examined an ethnographic project that examines an ethnographical project that i...
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning in Collaborative Moments: Practising Relating Differently with Dementia in Dialogue Meetings

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe experiences with dialogue evenings within a research collaboration on long-term care and dementia in the Netherlands and argue that learning took place in three different articulations: first, participants learnt to expand their notion of knowledge, second, they learnt to relate differently to each other and, therewith, to dementia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Documenting Impact: An Impact Case Study of Anthropological Collaboration in Tobacco Control

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider the impact case study (ICS) as a specific kind of document, one which, as part of the U.K.'s Research Excellence Framework (this article), enforces a common template for the description and measurement of the social and economic effects of research in higher education.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropology in health research: from qualitative methods to multidisciplinarity

TL;DR: The potential contribution of anthropology is described, which is based on the empirical comparison of particular societies, which most commonly relates to the social and cultural dimensions of health, ill health, and medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Translation, Value, and Space: Theorizing an Ethnographic and Engaged Environmental Anthropology

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue for placing the politics of translation and theories of value and spatial production at the center of environmental anthropology, arguing that Gimi understand their forests to be part of a series of transactive dialectical relationships that work to produce identity and space.
Book

Indigenous knowledge inquiries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a tool box of methods for designing and managing indigenous knowledge project scenarios, including the cube axes, Venn diagramming, and Venn diagrams.

Tyranny/Transformation: Power and Paradox in Participatory Development

TL;DR: Two recent works on participatory development provide perspectives on values and pro- cess in development as discussed by the authors, and the contributions in the volumes move participation from a seemingly unassailable theoretical panacea to a point from which it can be critically examined in multiple contexts.
Related Papers (5)