Planning ethically responsible research

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Planning ethically responsible research

Joan E. Sieber, Martin B. Tolich

(Applied social research methods series, v. 31)

Sage Publications, c2013

2nd ed

  • : pbk

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 213-226) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Extensively revised and updated to serve today's needs for insight and solutions to the most vexing ethical and regulatory problems faced by researchers today, Planning Ethically Responsible Research, Second Edition guides readers through one of the most important aspects of their social or behavioral research: planning ethically responsible research. Authors Joan E. Sieber and Martin B. Tolich offer invaluable, practical guidance to researchers and graduate students to understand ethical concerns within real-life research situations, satisfy federal regulations governing human research, and work with the university's Institutional Review Board (IRB). The book includes an abundance of useful tools: detailed instructions on development of an effective IRB protocol; methods for handling issues of consent, privacy, confidentiality and deception; ways to assess risk and benefit to optimize research outcomes; and how to respect the needs of vulnerable research populations.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction: Research Governance and Research Ethics Chapter 2. Why We Need Ethics: Assessing Vulnerability, Risk and Benefit Chapter 3. The Relevance of Ethical Theory to IRB Chapter 4. A Retrospective IRB Review: Rehabilitating Milgram, Zimbardo and Humphreys Chapter 5. Journalist Ethics Does Not Equal Social Scientists Ethics Chapter 6. Community-Engaged Research and Ethnography: Extreme Misfits with the Medical Model Chapter 7. Communicating Informed Consent and Process Consent Chapter 8. Degrees of non-Disclosure Chapter 9. Strategies for Assuring Confidentiality Chapter 10. The Ethics for the Invisible, Powerless and Vulnerable Research Assistant Chapter 11. Why IRBs Have an Important Place: The Autoethnographic Experiment Chapter 12. Evidence-Based Ethical Problem Solving: A Research Agenda Chapter 13. Making Ethics Review a Learning Institution: Ten Simple Suggestions

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