Fieldwork, Volumen 3Christopher John Pole SAGE, 2005 - 345 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 23
Página 14
... activities , or whether the argument is that all human activities are political by nature . In large part , though , as I noted earlier , the argument that research is political , in the sense that values are implicated in it , gains ...
... activities , or whether the argument is that all human activities are political by nature . In large part , though , as I noted earlier , the argument that research is political , in the sense that values are implicated in it , gains ...
Página 17
... activities are political , to one degree or another . But I have also argued that there is a sense in which research should not be political , and a similar argument could be made for other activities , for example in relation to work ...
... activities are political , to one degree or another . But I have also argued that there is a sense in which research should not be political , and a similar argument could be made for other activities , for example in relation to work ...
Página 162
... activities struck me as demeaning , even for campaign grunts . They were also not in line with my research agenda . I thought it would be more productive to spend time at the campaign headquarters observing organizational activities ...
... activities struck me as demeaning , even for campaign grunts . They were also not in line with my research agenda . I thought it would be more productive to spend time at the campaign headquarters observing organizational activities ...
Índice
VOLUME | 3 |
Muddy Boots | 22 |
Deconstructing the Field Roy Turner | 40 |
Página de créditos | |
Otras 15 secciones no se muestran.
Términos y frases comunes
academic American Sociological Association argued argument asked behavior believe breast cancer commitment concerned conduct context Cornerville covert participant observation critical Crossmaglen depersonalisation develop difficult dilemmas discussion educational research effect emotional Enlightenment ethical ethnocentrism ethnographic example experience feelings felt feminist field research fieldwork force former mental patient Foucault funding gatekeepers gender hospital individual informed consent institutions interaction interests interviews involved issues knowledge lifeworld London Maanen Marxism mastectomy methodological methods moral Northern Ireland organisation organization participant observation particular Peneff perspective police officers political position possible practice problems professional proselytizing proselytizing groups pseudopatients psychiatric psychiatric hospital qualitative research question relations relationships research process research role researcher's responsible sense sensitive setting situation social research social science social scientist society sociologist sociology sponsor staff student subjects talk understanding University Press value neutrality violence women York