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  1. Participants’ Right to Withdraw from Research: Researchers’ Lived Experiences on Ethics of Withdrawal.Bibek Dahal - 2024 - Journal of Academic Ethics 22 (1):191-209.
    Ethics in research can be broadly divided into two epistemic dimensions. One dimension focuses on bureaucratic procedures (i.e., procedural ethics), while the other focuses on contextually and culturally contested practice of ethics in research (i.e., ethics in practice). Researchers experience both dimensions distinctly in their qualitative research. The review of ethics in prospective research through bureaucratic procedures aims to measure compliance with documented requirements relating to research participants, data management, consent, and ensure researchers can demonstrate their ethical competence before they (...)
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  • Research Ethics in Swedish Dissertations in Educational Science – A Matter of Confusion.Marita Cronqvist - forthcoming - Journal of Academic Ethics:1-16.
    In all research, ethical considerations are crucial to reliability and quality and researchers are guided by various national and international documents and ethical committees. Despite different strategies to guide researchers and to ensure quality, there still seems to be uncertainty in educational science about how research ethics should be positioned and handled in practice. The aim of this study is to phenomenologically explore what meanings the phenomenon research ethics are given in Swedish doctoral dissertations in educational research based on how (...)
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  • Negotiating local and global: Developing Social Science research ethics policy in a Central Asian context.Roza Sagitova, Zarena Syrgak Kyzy & Lynne Parmenter - forthcoming - Research Ethics.
    This paper addresses the issue of how local and global norms and requirements are negotiated in the early stages of development of Social Science research ethics policy in a Global South context. A review of relevant literature followed by analysis of relevant national and institutional policies highlights both tensions and creative potential for ongoing research ethics initiatives. It was found that safety, trust and confidentiality issues are common problems reported by social science researchers in Kyrgyzstan. National level documents do not (...)
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  • One size fits not quite all: Universal research ethics with diversity.Mohamed S. Msoroka & Diana Amundsen - 2017 - Research Ethics 14 (3):1-17.
    For researchers in Aotearoa New Zealand who intend to conduct research with people, it is common practice to first ensure that their proposals are approved by a Human Research Ethics Committee. HRECs take the role of reviewing, approving or rejecting research proposals and deciding on whether the intended research will be completed in the ‘right’, rather than the ‘wrong’ way. Such decisions are based upon a system which is guided by universal ethical principles – principles that assume there is universal (...)
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  • Researchers’ reflections on ethics of care as decolonial research practice: understanding Indigenous knowledge communication systems to navigate moments of ethical tension in rural Malawi.Mtisunge Isabel Kamlongera & Mkotama W. Katenga-Kaunda - 2023 - Research Ethics 19 (3):312-324.
    This article is autoethnographic, based upon the authors’ experiences and reflections upon encountered moments of ethical tension whilst conducting research in rural Malawi. Given that knowledge production, as a process, has been marred by colonial forms of power, the project was underpinned by efforts to achieve a decolonial approach to the research, including the research ethics. The authors share of their endeavours to counterbalance the challenges of power asymmetries whilst researching and working with an Indigenous community whose reality can be (...)
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