Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors

This paper explores ethical issues of reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness in conducting ethnographic fieldwork in the Global South as part of PhD research projects. Against the backdrop of increasingly bureaucratised doctoral processes, we argue that PhD students occupy a particular terrain th...

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Main Authors: Chris Millora, Siti Maimunah, Enid Still
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2020-08-01
Series:Acta Academica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/aa/article/view/4725
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spelling doaj-0e97c5850c2240d5834d4b6e1842c8032020-11-25T03:41:03ZengUniversity of the Free StateActa Academica0587-24052415-04792020-08-015211030https://doi.org/10.18820/24150479/aa52i1/SP2Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness AuthorsChris Millora0Siti Maimunah1Enid Still2University of East Anglia, United KingdomUniversity of Passau, GermanyUniversity of Passau, GermanyThis paper explores ethical issues of reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness in conducting ethnographic fieldwork in the Global South as part of PhD research projects. Against the backdrop of increasingly bureaucratised doctoral processes, we argue that PhD students occupy a particular terrain that involves continuous navigation of tensions between institutionally-required ethical procedures and ‘situational’ ethical processes in the field. We illustrate these tensions by analysing reflections on our experiences of conducting fieldwork in Indonesia, India and the Philippines. Guided by decolonial and feminist thought highlighting the politics of knowledge (co)production, this paper unpacks the problems of insider-outsider binaries and standardised ethical procedures, and explores the possibilities of ethics as visible, collaborative negotiation. https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/aa/article/view/4725research ethicsethnographydoctoral researchdecolonialityfeminism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris Millora
Siti Maimunah
Enid Still
spellingShingle Chris Millora
Siti Maimunah
Enid Still
Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors
Acta Academica
research ethics
ethnography
doctoral research
decoloniality
feminism
author_facet Chris Millora
Siti Maimunah
Enid Still
author_sort Chris Millora
title Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors
title_short Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors
title_full Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors
title_fullStr Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors
title_full_unstemmed Reflecting on the ethics of PhD research in the Global South: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness Authors
title_sort reflecting on the ethics of phd research in the global south: reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness authors
publisher University of the Free State
series Acta Academica
issn 0587-2405
2415-0479
publishDate 2020-08-01
description This paper explores ethical issues of reciprocity, reflexivity and situatedness in conducting ethnographic fieldwork in the Global South as part of PhD research projects. Against the backdrop of increasingly bureaucratised doctoral processes, we argue that PhD students occupy a particular terrain that involves continuous navigation of tensions between institutionally-required ethical procedures and ‘situational’ ethical processes in the field. We illustrate these tensions by analysing reflections on our experiences of conducting fieldwork in Indonesia, India and the Philippines. Guided by decolonial and feminist thought highlighting the politics of knowledge (co)production, this paper unpacks the problems of insider-outsider binaries and standardised ethical procedures, and explores the possibilities of ethics as visible, collaborative negotiation.
topic research ethics
ethnography
doctoral research
decoloniality
feminism
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/aa/article/view/4725
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AT enidstill reflectingontheethicsofphdresearchintheglobalsouthreciprocityreflexivityandsituatednessauthors
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