“Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research

Transnational research funders such as the European Commission and NordForsk increasingly require researchers to conduct transnational research. Yet, there is little research on what this means for seeking ethics approval, not least for qualitative researchers. Much work on ethics approval comes fro...

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Main Authors: Gabriele Griffin, Doris Leibetseder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-08-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Methods
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406919869444
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spelling doaj-89ff559956ef46fab26cfca5332d26b52020-11-25T03:26:54ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Qualitative Methods1609-40692019-08-011810.1177/1609406919869444“Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative ResearchGabriele Griffin0Doris Leibetseder1 Centre for Gender Research, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden Centre for Gender Research, Uppsala University, Uppsala, SwedenTransnational research funders such as the European Commission and NordForsk increasingly require researchers to conduct transnational research. Yet, there is little research on what this means for seeking ethics approval, not least for qualitative researchers. Much work on ethics approval comes from Canada, the United States, and other Anglophone countries, often in a health-related context, and centers on issues between researchers and research ethics boards (REBs), or on inconsistent or inappropriate decision-making by REBs. Ethical conduct within research has, of course, generated a rich literature but not on gaining ethics approval when conducting qualitative transnational research. Rather, the underlying situation usually is that the research is conducted in the same geopolitical space as where the REB is located. Drawing on two cases studies, in which researchers located in one country, Sweden, sought ethics approval to conduct research in other European countries, we explore some of the challenges that we faced in gaining such approval and provide some suggestions how this process might be made both more efficient and more productive for researchers and research funders alike.https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406919869444
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabriele Griffin
Doris Leibetseder
spellingShingle Gabriele Griffin
Doris Leibetseder
“Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research
International Journal of Qualitative Methods
author_facet Gabriele Griffin
Doris Leibetseder
author_sort Gabriele Griffin
title “Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research
title_short “Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research
title_full “Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research
title_fullStr “Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research
title_full_unstemmed “Only Applies to Research Conducted in Sweden…”: Dilemmas in Gaining Ethics Approval in Transnational Qualitative Research
title_sort “only applies to research conducted in sweden…”: dilemmas in gaining ethics approval in transnational qualitative research
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Qualitative Methods
issn 1609-4069
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Transnational research funders such as the European Commission and NordForsk increasingly require researchers to conduct transnational research. Yet, there is little research on what this means for seeking ethics approval, not least for qualitative researchers. Much work on ethics approval comes from Canada, the United States, and other Anglophone countries, often in a health-related context, and centers on issues between researchers and research ethics boards (REBs), or on inconsistent or inappropriate decision-making by REBs. Ethical conduct within research has, of course, generated a rich literature but not on gaining ethics approval when conducting qualitative transnational research. Rather, the underlying situation usually is that the research is conducted in the same geopolitical space as where the REB is located. Drawing on two cases studies, in which researchers located in one country, Sweden, sought ethics approval to conduct research in other European countries, we explore some of the challenges that we faced in gaining such approval and provide some suggestions how this process might be made both more efficient and more productive for researchers and research funders alike.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406919869444
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