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Ethical challenges in participatory research with children and youth Judith Loveridge, Bronwyn Elisabeth Wood, Eddy Davis-Rae and Hiria McRae

By: Loveridge, Judith.
Contributor(s): Wood, Bronwyn E | Davis-Rae, Eddy | McRae, Hiria.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Qualitative Research.Publisher: Sage, 2023Subject(s): CHILDREN | INDIGENOUS PEOPLES | IWI TAKETAKE | MĀORI | RANGAHAU MĀORI | RESEARCH ETHICS | RESEARCH METHODS | TAIOHI | TAITAMARIKI | TAMARIKI | YOUNG PEOPLE | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1177/14687941221149594 In: Qualitative Research, 2023, First published online, 16 February 2023Summary: The growth of relational, participatory, collaborative and emergent research approaches in recent years has brought new ethical challenges for research with children and youth. These approaches require greater consideration of the specific social and cultural contexts of the research, along with the greater emphasis on researcher–participant relationships that often occur over sustained periods of time. Very few tools are available to help researchers think through the everyday ethical dilemmas such research can raise. In this article, we review the theoretical underpinnings of feminist and indigenous research methodologies that have encouraged these emerging approaches. Through examining an 18-month Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) project case study, we critically review ethical moments relating to negotiating consent over a sustained period of time, enhancing co-design and navigating power issues between adult and youth researchers. We conclude with a number of questions to ‘think with’ when reflecting on ethical research with children and youth. (Authors' abstract). Record #8033
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Qualitative Research, 2023, First published online, 16 February 2023

The growth of relational, participatory, collaborative and emergent research approaches in recent years has brought new ethical challenges for research with children and youth. These approaches require greater consideration of the specific social and cultural contexts of the research, along with the greater emphasis on researcher–participant relationships that often occur over sustained periods of time. Very few tools are available to help researchers think through the everyday ethical dilemmas such research can raise. In this article, we review the theoretical underpinnings of feminist and indigenous research methodologies that have encouraged these emerging approaches. Through examining an 18-month Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) project case study, we critically review ethical moments relating to negotiating consent over a sustained period of time, enhancing co-design and navigating power issues between adult and youth researchers. We conclude with a number of questions to ‘think with’ when reflecting on ethical research with children and youth. (Authors' abstract). Record #8033