Emotions and agency in prison research

The emotionality of prison research has received much justified attention in recent years. However, this aspect of undertaking qualitative research is often not considered by early career researchers until they are confronted with the impact of both researching emotionally laden subjects and employi...

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Main Authors: Joe Garrihy, Aoife Watters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-06-01
Series:Methodological Innovations
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120926341
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spelling doaj-f52921dd873743a69354952e8cc1101d2020-11-25T03:20:33ZengSAGE PublishingMethodological Innovations2059-79912020-06-011310.1177/2059799120926341Emotions and agency in prison researchJoe Garrihy0Aoife Watters1Department of Law, Maynooth University, Maynooth, IrelandSchool of of Business and Humanities, Dundalk Institute of Technology, Dundalk, IrelandThe emotionality of prison research has received much justified attention in recent years. However, this aspect of undertaking qualitative research is often not considered by early career researchers until they are confronted with the impact of both researching emotionally laden subjects and employing their emotional agency as the researcher. Emerging from this, the authors argue for the development of a methodology that conceives researchers as emotional agents. This methodology incorporates harnessing emotional experiences as a tool for data collection. In this way, researchers are encouraged and trained to shift from passive to active emotional agents. Thus, far from inhibiting the research, the inherent emotionality of conducting research enhances its rigour, integrity and validity. Emotionality is intrinsic to conducting research in the prison milieu. As such, it warrants constructive employment and integration into existing research methodologies. This article draws on the authors’ respective experiences conducting mixed methods research in prison settings. The authors’ research methodologies incorporated emotional reflexivity as a core constituent throughout their data collection, analysis and the writing of their doctoral studies. The argument will be illustrated by detailing experiences of emotional charge during the fieldwork. To reflect this, the authors advocate for the emergence of an integrative methodology. The development of such a methodology would be of value to prison researchers but particularly to novice and/or doctoral researchers. Furthermore, it would be similarly applicable to researchers throughout the field of criminal justice and beyond.https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120926341
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joe Garrihy
Aoife Watters
spellingShingle Joe Garrihy
Aoife Watters
Emotions and agency in prison research
Methodological Innovations
author_facet Joe Garrihy
Aoife Watters
author_sort Joe Garrihy
title Emotions and agency in prison research
title_short Emotions and agency in prison research
title_full Emotions and agency in prison research
title_fullStr Emotions and agency in prison research
title_full_unstemmed Emotions and agency in prison research
title_sort emotions and agency in prison research
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Methodological Innovations
issn 2059-7991
publishDate 2020-06-01
description The emotionality of prison research has received much justified attention in recent years. However, this aspect of undertaking qualitative research is often not considered by early career researchers until they are confronted with the impact of both researching emotionally laden subjects and employing their emotional agency as the researcher. Emerging from this, the authors argue for the development of a methodology that conceives researchers as emotional agents. This methodology incorporates harnessing emotional experiences as a tool for data collection. In this way, researchers are encouraged and trained to shift from passive to active emotional agents. Thus, far from inhibiting the research, the inherent emotionality of conducting research enhances its rigour, integrity and validity. Emotionality is intrinsic to conducting research in the prison milieu. As such, it warrants constructive employment and integration into existing research methodologies. This article draws on the authors’ respective experiences conducting mixed methods research in prison settings. The authors’ research methodologies incorporated emotional reflexivity as a core constituent throughout their data collection, analysis and the writing of their doctoral studies. The argument will be illustrated by detailing experiences of emotional charge during the fieldwork. To reflect this, the authors advocate for the emergence of an integrative methodology. The development of such a methodology would be of value to prison researchers but particularly to novice and/or doctoral researchers. Furthermore, it would be similarly applicable to researchers throughout the field of criminal justice and beyond.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799120926341
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