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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Should we Maintain or Break Confidentiality? The Choices Made by Social Researchers in the Context of Law Violation and Harm

Adrianna Surmiak
- 01 Sep 2020 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 3, pp 229-247
TLDR
In this paper, the authors discuss the experiences and opinions of researchers concerning the maintenance or breaking of confidentiality in the context of knowledge about illegal activities and harm, and examine the ways in which the researchers justified their decisions.
Abstract
Confidentiality represents a core principle of research ethics and forms a standard practice in social research. However, what should a researcher do if they learn about illegal activities or harm during the research process? Few systematic studies consider researchers’ attitudes and reactions in such situations. This paper analyzes this issue on the basis of in-depth interviews with Polish sociologists and anthropologists who conduct qualitative research with vulnerable participants. It discusses the experiences and opinions of researchers concerning the maintenance or breaking of confidentiality in the context of knowledge about illegal activities and harm. It also examines the ways in which the researchers justified their decisions. Most of my interviewees respected confidentiality in spite of knowledge of crime or harm, and referred to their epistemological perspectives regarding the role of the researcher, implicit consequentialist ethical reasoning and personal values. Where researchers did break confidentiality, this owed to their personal values and willingness to protect their informants, especially in cases of minor levels of harm as opposed to serious crime. Therefore, their experiences indicate the failure of both obligatory unconditional assurances of confidentiality and the requirement for researchers to assure confidentiality to the extent permitted by law. I argue that researchers do not need constrictive and potentially punitive rules about confidentiality, but rather sensitizing frameworks about how to contemplate and anticipate the many complexities and moral shadings of situations in the field.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The transformative power of cooperation between social movements: Squatting and tenants' movements in Poland

Dominika V. Polanska, +1 more
- 01 Apr 2015 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the relations between tenants' and squatting movements in Poland by studying two cities where both movements are established and cooperating closely, assuming that cooperation between social movements results in negotiations and transformations of the involved social movement actors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Legal Intrusion and the Politics of Fieldwork The Impact of the Brajuha Case

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the problem of legal intrusion into the research process and show that research experience shows that such intrusions need not be fatal, but can be catastrophic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Confidentiality in criminological research and other ethical issues

TL;DR: The issues I shall raise are also issues in other disciplines of research and teaching; some are peculiarly specific to criminology; all, I am asserting, are ethical issues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Legal Issues in Acquiring Information about Illegal Behaviour Through Criminological Research

TL;DR: In the United Kingdom, a range of legislation, including the Criminal Law Act 1967, Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act 1989, Terrorism Act 2000, Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, Contempt of Court Act 1981 and Official Secrets Acts 1911 to 1983, have been used to force disclosure of researchers' records as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethikbegutachtung in der sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlichen Forschung? Ein Debattenbeitrag aus soziologischer und ethnologischer Sicht

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the Entwicklungen in Deutschland aus ethnologischer and soziologischer perspektive, and sprechen uns fur eine institutionelle Verankerung des Themas aus and unterstutzen die Entwicklerung von Strukturen der forschungsethischen Begutachtung, sofern diese freiwillig bleiben und the methodische Vielfalt der Sozial-and Kulturwissenschaftlichen Fors
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Trending Questions (3)
Why is confidentiality of information a key aspect of social work ethics and how should client data be protected?

Confidentiality is important in social research to protect participants from harm and maintain trust. The paper discusses researchers' attitudes towards breaking confidentiality in cases of harm, but does not specifically address social work ethics or client data protection.

How can the confidentiality and privacy of respondents be best ensured in the context of research?

The paper discusses the importance of maintaining confidentiality in research and the potential consequences of breaching it. It emphasizes the core principle of research ethics and the standard practice of maintaining confidentiality in social research. However, it does not provide specific guidelines on how to best ensure the confidentiality and privacy of respondents in the context of research.

What are the best practices for keeping the confidentiality of research participants?

The paper discusses the importance of maintaining confidentiality in social research and highlights that researchers tend to prioritize confidentiality to protect informants and maintain trust. However, it does not provide specific best practices for keeping confidentiality.