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Category: THE ERIC LIBRARY

Disclosing Childhoods: Research and Knowledge Production for a Critical Childhood Studies.

Spyrou, S. (2018). Disclosing Childhoods: Research and Knowledge Production for a Critical Childhood Studies. London: Palgrave Macmillan Ltd (Part of Springer Nature). ISBN: 978-1-137-47904-4.

Working the limits of “giving voice” to children: A critical conceptual review.

Facca, D., Gladstone, B., & Teachman, G. (2020). Working the limits of “giving voice” to children: A critical conceptual review. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 19.

Becoming-with research participants: Possibilities in qualitative research with children.

Daelman, S., De Schauwer, E., & Van Hove, G. (2020). Becoming-with research participants: Possibilities in qualitative research with children. Childhood, 27(4), pp.483-497.

Generalizing together with children: The significance of children’s concepts for mutual knowledge creation.

Chimirri, N. A. (2019). Generalizing together with children: The significance of children’s concepts for mutual knowledge creation. In C. Højholt & E. Schraube (Eds.), Subjectivity and Knowledge: Generalization in the Psychological Study of Everyday Life (pp. 115-139). Cham: Springer International Publishing. ISBN: 978-3-030-29977-4.

The continued importance of research with children and youth: The “new” Sociology of Childhood 40 years later.

Swauger, M., Castro Ingrid, E., & Harger, B. (2017). The continued importance of research with children and youth: The “new” Sociology of Childhood 40 years later. In Researching Children and Youth: Methodological Issues, Strategies, and Innovations, 22, pp. 1-7. This chapter introduces the broad themes of this special issue. It draws attention to the ethical […]

Accessing online data for youth mental health research: Meeting the ethical challenges.

Perez Vallejos, E., Koene, A., Carter, C. J., Hunt, D., Woodard, C., Urquhart, L., Bergin, A., & Statache, R. (2019). Accessing online data for youth mental health research: Meeting the ethical challenges. Philosophy & Technology, 32(1), pp. 87-110.

Opt-out parental consent in online surveys: Ethical considerations.

Harris, J., & Porcellato, L. (2018). Opt-out parental consent in online surveys: Ethical considerations. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, 13(3), pp. 223-229.

From concept to data: Sleuthing social change-oriented youth voices on YouTube.

Caron, C., Raby, R., Mitchell, C., Théwissen-LeBlanc, S., & Prioletta, J. (2017). From concept to data: sleuthing social change-oriented youth voices on YouTube. Journal of Youth Studies, 20(1), pp. 47-62.

WYRED Final Independent Ethical Review.

Mannion, G. (2019). WYRED Final Independent Ethical Review. University of Salamanca: WYRED Consortium.

Young people’s views regarding participation in mental health and wellbeing research through social media.

Monks, H., Cardoso, P., Papageorgiou, A., Carolan, C., Costello, L., & Thomas, L. (2015). Young people’s views regarding participation in mental health and wellbeing research through social media. The International Journal of Emotional Education, 7(1), pp. 4-19.

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The ERIC website emerged primarily through a collaboration between the Centre for Children and Young People at Southern Cross University, Australia, and UNICEF’s Office of Research, Innocenti. The website content is based on the following publication: Graham, A., Powell, M.A., Taylor, N., Anderson, D. & Fitzgerald, R. (2013). Ethical Research Involving Children. UNICEF: Florence. (Available in English, français, español, 한국어, Türkçe and Bahasa Indonesia).

All case studies, blogs posts, photos and library material remain the property of the cited author or publisher.

Other website content is licensed under a Creative Commons Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY licence) © UNICEF 2022. Subsequent website updates are undertaken by the ERIC team at Southern Cross University in line with this license. Questions can be directed to ccyp@scu.edu.au.

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