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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Journal | Volume | Article

145336

Reflecting on the ethics and politics of collecting interactional data

implications for training and practice

Susan A. Speer

pp. 279-286

Abstract

This special issue brings together researchers from psychology and linguistics who apply the ethnomethodologically informed analytic technique of conversation analysis (henceforth CA) to examine a range of ethical issues as they emerge in transcribed recordings of interactions collected as part of routine research encounters. The data authors analyse are diverse, including naturalistic audio and video recordings of members’ everyday and professional practices (Mondada 2014), an ethnography of a gynaecology unit in a public hospital in Italy (Fatigante and Orletti 2014), focus group interviews on domestic family life (Alby and Fatigante 2014), and semi-public meetings, recorded as part of an ethnography of ageing, poverty, and social exclusion (Paoletti 2014b). Noting that “ethical issues in research have seldom been the focus of ethnomethodological studies” (Paoletti 2014a: 174; see also Mondada 2014: 182–183), the primary aim of this special issue is to “open a debate on...

Publication details

Published in:

Paoletti Isabella (2014) Ethical issues in collecting interactional data. Human Studies 37 (2).

Pages: 279-286

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-014-9310-8

Full citation:

Speer Susan A. (2014) „Reflecting on the ethics and politics of collecting interactional data: implications for training and practice“. Human Studies 37 (2), 279–286.