Anthropological Research in Light of Research Ethics Review: Canadian Master's Theses, 1995-2004
Creator
van den Hoonaard, Will C.
Connolly, Anita
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics 2006 June; 1(2): 59-69
Abstract
DESPITE CLAIMS THAT RESEARCH-ETHICS review is changing or discouraging social research, there are no studies that have tested this assumption. Examining Canadian Master's theses in anthropology between 1995 and 2004, this paper explores the extent to which the theses represent a change in number, topic, or methodology in relation to formal ethicsreview guidelines that came into force in Canada in 2001. ProQuest Digital Dissertations reveals that the number of theses has increased, and that there has not been a noticeable shift from research involving humans to research based on archival data, or theoretical or review theses. However, there has been a very significant increase in research that is called ethnography, but that relies exclusively on interviews. Possible reasons for the halving of percent of ethnographic or participantobservation research are explored.
Date
2006-06Collections
Metadata
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Trends in Canadian Sociology Master's Theses in Relation to Research Ethics Review, 1995-2004
van den Hoonaard, Will C. (2006-12)THIS PAPER EXAMINES TRENDS IN CANADIAN Master's theses in sociology, 1995-2004, in the course the implementation of Canada's national research-ethics guidelines (2001), using data available from ProQuest Dissertations. ...