Legal, ethical and moral issues involved in researching conflict, violence and peace

Date:

30/07/2015 - 09/10/2015

Organised by:

Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation and Socal Justice, Queen's University Belfast

Presenter:

Professor John D Brewer

Level:

Advanced (specialised prior knowledge)

Contact:

Professor John Brewer j.brewer@qub.ac.uk 02890973835

Map:

View in Google Maps  (BT7 1NN)

Venue:

Queen's University, University Square, Belfast

Description:

This course is open to PhD students, early career researchers and practitioners in civil society groups and will deal with the legal, ethical and moral issues around studying conflict, violence and peace in dangerous and sensitive locations. It is organised over two separate days to accommodate assimilation of the material and to aid reflective discussion: 30 July 2015 and 9 October 2015. Participants must sign up to both days. Some bursaries are available for help with travel costs from Britain. Registered students are charged a nominal fee of £15 each day but all others will be charged £25 per day.

The concerns of the course include the following: the management of risk and danger, both to researchers and respondents; the special problems posed when undertaking sensitive research; issues around the management of gender and identity in the field in dangerous settings; recent developments in ethical and legal practice and the new regulatory codes of conduct; problems around the legal constraints operating on informed consent and promises of confidentiality; the management of risk in data collection; dealing with the problem of what is called respondents’ ‘guilty knowledge’; and the legal and ethical issues involved in dissemination and publication. This draws on the expertise of course teachers in the field of sensitive and dangerous research and in the legal conduct of research.

Advanced training in this area meets a growing need in the research community as research on conflict, violence and peace increases in line with the global growth in these issues in late modernity. The course is multi-disciplinary and comparative, thus enhancing the development of multi-disciplinary comparative research in British social science. The course will address ethical and legal regulatory frameworks, ensuring that the training in methodological rigour which participants gain from elsewhere is directly coupled with considerations of risk, ethics and law, thus further centralising and mainstreaming moral, ethical and legal standards in research training and practice. The course integrates the skills and experiences of senior staff with early career researchers and teachers, building capacity in British social science. The course integrates law and legal studies with other social sciences and enhances the collaboration between them.

Course delivery will be by traditional lectures by recognised experts, in-depth analyses of actual cases by the researchers engaged with them, participant-led discussion of hypothetical cases that highlight significant research dilemmas, and open-forum discussion.

The aims and objectives of the course are:

 

  • The course is designed to raise awareness amongst postgraduate students, early career researchers, and civil society practitioner and professional groups of a number of key issues involved in researching conflict, violence and peace, and to enhance their skills when undertaking and evaluating this kind of research.

 

  • The increased ethical and legal regulation of dangerous and sensitive research, with the associated need for the management of risk, which the themes of conflict, violence and peace epitomize, calls for focused and direct attention to the training needs of researchers working in this area.

 

  • The course will give focused attention to a range of ethical, legal and moral problems that are not usually addressed in general postgraduate research training courses in such detail.

 

  • The course is approached from the perspective of a number of disciplines and draws on the experience of fieldwork in a variety of societies and settings, enhancing the learning experience of course participants.

 

Cost:

Registered students are charged £15 per day. All others will be charged £25 per day.

Website and registration:

Region:

Northern Ireland

Keywords:

Mixed Methods Data Handling and Data Analysis, Research Management and Impact, Research Skills, Communication and Dissemination, Research Skills, Communication and Dissemination (other), Ethics , Conflict, violence and peace research , Law

Related publications and presentations:

Mixed Methods Data Handling and Data Analysis
Research Management and Impact
Research Skills, Communication and Dissemination
Research Skills, Communication and Dissemination (other)

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