1st Edition

Essentials of Field Relationships

By Amy Kaler, Melanie Beres Copyright 2010
    128 Pages
    by Routledge

    128 Pages
    by Routledge

    Field research can consist of trekking across the globe to study peoples in exotic cultural settings. It can also mean strapping on your running shoes and observing behavior at the local market. Regardless of whether the researcher is “at home” or away, the development of research relationships is paramount to the success of the research project. In this book, the authors provide guidance to researchers on developing relationships in their field research. Using a myriad of examples from projects in a wide range of settings, Kaler and Beres offer helpful hints about how to navigate the personal side of conducting research—establishing and maintaining relationships, handling ethical dilemmas, and identifying how the personal identity of researchers help shape their projects.

    Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 Transitioning In and Out of the Field; Chapter 3 Maintaining Relationships in the Field; Chapter 4 Establishing and Negotiating a Researcher Identity; Chapter 5 Gathering Data; Chapter 6 Research Ethics; Chapter 7 Concluding Thoughts;

    Biography

    Amy Kaler is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and the School of Public Health at the University of Alberta. She studies the institutional contexts of reproductive and sexual health, with emphasis on birth control and sexually transmitted diseases. Her research focuses on southern and eastern Africa and western Canada. She is the author of Running After Pills: Politics, Gender and Contraception in Colonial Zimbabwe and co-editor of The Gendered Society Reader (Canadian edition). She has also published extensively in leading journals in sociology, history, public health, and gender studies.,
    Melanie Beres is a lecturer in the Department of Anthropology, Gender and Sociology at the University of Otago, New Zealand. She has conducted field research in Canada and New Zealand. To date, her “field” has remained relatively close to home, including research with transient youth in a small resort community in the Canadian Rockies. She has several previous publications and conference papers based on fieldwork research and about fieldwork, with a focus on research with transient populations. Currently she teaches research methods, theories of social power and social inequality. Her current research projects are focused on exploring power in intimate relationships in local and international contexts.