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Index
 »Â
Ethnographic Research Methods
 »Â
Chapter 1
 »Â
Level 1
level: Level 1
Questions and Answers List
level questions: Level 1
Question
Answer
method of anthropologic research that gives scientific descriptions of individual human societies
Ethnography
an ethical responsibility to address processes of unfairness or injustice within a particular lived domain
critical ethnography
when the researchers interests are masked; requires denial of all politics
ventriloquist stance
when the researcher makes their position known and takes an activist position
activist stance
a patterned behavior or way of life
culture
insider analysis based on theoretical and pragmatic insights
emic
outsider analysis produced from interpreting a culture
etic
an approach to developing new theories involving induction; focusing on methodology and data collection
grounded theory
a form of reasoning that allows for the creation of explanatory hypotheses through which we perceive phenomena as related
abductive analysis
approaching research with a feminist lens; focuses on relationship power
feminist ethnography
performing ethnographic research at multiple sites
multi-sited ethnography
attempts to reject stereotypes and looking at what is the point of connection to understanding everything
relational ethnography
to give the whole picture or context
thick description
distinctive culture of a small group of people
microculture
giving people as much context as possible
positionality
going beyond do no harm; the idea of human rights
principle of care
collaborating with the people you study
collaborative ethnography
informing someone their role in the project as well as the projects information
informed consent
the board you submit a proposal to who check and see how you plan to ensure ethics
IRB
systemic research aimed to end up with generalizable knowledge
IRB definition of research
shorter, faster, version with different questions
excempt IRB proposal
established the 3 ethical principles: justice, beneficiance, and respect for persons
Belmont report
a study done which followed gay men and exploited their patterns
humphrey's tearoom trade
the stanford prison experiment
zimbardo prison experiment
everyone has a different limitation on their privacy
idea of privacy
your position is never fixed; you are never set on one and become blind to all sides
insider/outsider in research
someone who has a certain degree of access, but others keep them on their side
outsider-within
someone who has access but no power or rights
insider-without
keep going back and highlighting you and your side
egocentricism
imagining your on trial; could witnesses say something that contradict your data
ethnographic trial
avoiding someone who would skew your research; could this person jeopardize your argument
inconvenience sample
take a step back from your field to clearly think and not let your passion drive you
passion detachment
collaborative research done by more than one ethnographer or more than one team
collaborative ethnography
your study should always benefit you and your studies
reciprocity