糖心Vlog

Research ethics: when friends become work

Social scientist mulls the perks and pitfalls of using personal networks in research

Published on
August 28, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Alamy

Too close?: Using acquaintances in research requires clear thought

A new paper explores the ethical challenges for academics in using friends as subjects of their research.

Jo Brewis, professor of organisation and consumption at the University of Leicester, works in the field of critical management studies and has often explored 鈥渉ow careers intersect with and are influenced by other aspects of people鈥檚 lives: intimate relationships, geographical location, parenthood and so on鈥. Because this touches on sensitive issues of the body and sexuality, she has 鈥渘ever been a 鈥榗old caller鈥欌夆 in her research but has relied on existing personal networks.

Her paper on 鈥淭he ethics of researching friends: on convenience sampling in qualitative management and organization studies鈥, published online in the British Journal of Management, focuses on 鈥渁 project where I gathered data from six friends on their experiences of and attitudes towards sexual relationships, motherhood and life-work 鈥榖alance鈥欌.

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The advantages are fairly obvious. 鈥淎ccess negotiations鈥 presented few difficulties, writes Professor Brewis, 鈥渂ecause rapport and empathy already existed between us鈥. Sample selection was also made easier, since 鈥渢he themes I was exploring were ones we chatted about in the normal course of our friendships鈥. Though she made a firm decision never to draw on any prior information she happened to have about her friends in writing up her research, 鈥渢he frankness and depth of the narratives I collected from my six friend-respondents are, I feel, in large part a product of our friendships鈥.

Yet Professor Brewis鈥 paper also reports several ethical concerns. She experienced a 鈥渟ense of betrayal and disloyalty鈥 when reporting data from a friend 鈥渁bout the breakdown of her relationship鈥. Was there not a danger of 鈥渂ecoming excited by 鈥榡uicy鈥 data at the expense of the participants鈥 feelings鈥 or 鈥渆xposing [them] to readers鈥 鈥榲oyeuristic gaze鈥欌夆?

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If 鈥渙ver-exposure鈥 was one possibility, Professor Brewis recalled that she had also sometimes done the opposite, 鈥渟ilencing鈥 her friends鈥 voices by incorporating only fragments of their stories within broader 鈥渁cademic commentary鈥.

While anthropologists and others have written about the complexities of researching friends, says Professor Brewis, they had often focused on the friendships that develop during research 鈥 and those working in her field of management and organisation studies had largely neglected the question altogether.

鈥淚鈥檓 not suggesting we shouldn鈥檛 use this sort of 鈥榗onvenience sample鈥,鈥 she explains, 鈥渂ut if we are not explicit about these things, they can get sidelined and not thought through in the process of research.鈥

matthew.reisz@tesglobal.com

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