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Ethical Principles, Social Harm and the Economic Relations of Research: Negotiating Ethics Committee Requirements and Community Expectations in Ethnographic Research in Rural Malawi


Author(s) : Nicola Ansell, Evance Mwathunga, Flora Hajdu, Elsbeth Robson, Thandie Hlabana, Lorraine van Blerk, Roeland Hemsteede
Qualitative Inquiry
2
Citations (scopus)

Abstract


Conventional research ethics focus on avoidance of harm to individual participants through measures to ensure informed consent. In long-term ethnographic research projects involving multiple actors, however, a wider concept of harm is needed. We apply the criminological concept of social harm, which focuses on harm produced through and affecting wider social relations, to a research project that we undertook in Malawi. Through this, we show how structural economic inequalities shape the consequences of research for the differently positioned parties involved. Specifically, we focus on dilemmas around transferring resources within three social fields: our relations with a Malawian ethics committee; our interventions in a rural community; and our efforts to engage the policy community. Each of these involved multiple and differently placed individuals within broader, multi-scalar structural relations and reveals the inadequacies of conventional codes of ethics.


Original language en
Pages (from-to) 725-736
Volume 29
Issue number 6
Publication status Published - 2023

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This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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10.1177/10778004221124631

UN SDGs

This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

sdg

Access document

10.1177/10778004221124631

UN SDGs

This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

sdg

Access document

10.1177/10778004221124631