Ethics in context: essential flexibility in an international photo-elicitation project with children and young people |
| |
Authors: | Kate Burningham Susan Venn Bronwyn Hayward Sylvia Nissen Midori Aoyagi Mohammad Mehedi Hasan |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology &2. Centre for Environment and Sustainability, University of Surreyk.burningham@surrey.ac.uk;4. Centre for Environment and Sustainability, University of Surrey;5. Department of Political Science and International Relations, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand;6. National Institute for Environment Studies, Tsukuba, Japan |
| |
Abstract: | ABSTRACTExisting literatures have discussed both ethical issues in visual research with young people, and the problems associated with applying ‘universal’ ethical guidelines across varied cultural contexts. There has been little consideration, however, of specific issues raised in projects where visual research is being conducted with young people simultaneously in multiple national contexts. This paper contributes to knowledge in this area. We reflect on our experiences of planning and conducting the International CYCLES project involving photo elicitation with young people in Bangladesh, Brazil, India, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa and the UK. While some issues such as varying access to technology for taking and sharing photos and diverse cultural sensitivities around the use of photography were anticipated in advance, others were more unexpected. Balancing the need for methods to be appropriate, ethical and feasible within each setting with the desire for sufficient consistency across the project is challenging. We argue that an ‘ethics in context’ approach and an attitude of ‘methodological immaturity’ is critical in international visual research projects with young people. |
| |
Keywords: | Photo-elicitation children and young people ethics methods international |
|
|