Skip to content
Ethical Research Involving Children
  • Home
  • About
    • About
    • Philosophy
    • Project Partners
    • Acknowledgements
  • Charter
  • Guidance
    • Guidance
    • Harms and Benefits
    • Informed Consent
    • Privacy and Confidentiality
    • Payment and Compensation
  • Good Practice
    • Reflexive Tool
    • Responsibilities
  • Case Studies
  • Library
    • Library
    • Glossary
  • Blog

Category: THE ERIC LIBRARY

Working with ethical symmetry in social research with children.

Christensen, P., & Prout, A. (2002). Working with ethical symmetry in social research with children. Childhood, 9(4). pp. 477-497.

Ethical issues concerning consent in obtaining children’s reports on their experience of violence.

Cashmore, J. (2006). Ethical issues concerning consent in obtaining children’s reports on their experience of violence. Child Abuse & Neglect, 30. pp. 969-977.

Tick box for child? The ethical positioning of children as vulnerable, researchers as barbarians and reviewers as overly cautious.

Carter, B. (2009). Tick box for child? The ethical positioning of children as vulnerable, researchers as barbarians and reviewers as overly cautious. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 46(6). pp. 858-864.

The key to the gatekeepers: Passive consent and other ethical issues surrounding the rights of children to speak on issues that concern them.

Carroll-Lind, J., Chapman, J. W., Gregory, J., & Maxwell, G. (2006). The key to the gatekeepers: Passive consent and other ethical issues surrounding the rights of children to speak on issues that concern them. Child Abuse & Neglect, 30(9). pp. 979-989.

For their own good: Recruiting children for research.

Campbell, A. (2008). For their own good: Recruiting children for research. Childhood, 15(1). pp. 30-49.

Interviewing with children in their homes: Putting ethical principles into practice and developing flexible techniques.

Bushin, N. (2007). Interviewing with children in their homes: Putting ethical principles into practice and developing flexible techniques. Children’s Geographies, 5(3). pp. 235-251.

The influence of relationships on children’s and adolescents’ participation in research.

Broome, M. E., & Richards, D. J. (2003). The influence of relationships on children’s and adolescents’ participation in research. Nursing Research, 52(3). pp. 191-197.

Ethics and the everyday: Reconsidering approaches to research involving children and young people.

Bray, R., & Gooskens, I. (2006). Ethics and the everyday: Reconsidering approaches to research involving children and young people. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(1-2), pp. 45-55.

An ethical journey: Rights, relationships and reflexivity.

Bone, J. (2005). An ethical journey: Rights, relationships and reflexivity. Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 30(1), pp. 1-5.

Parental consent and the ethics of research with foster children: Beginning a cross-cultural dialogue.

Bogolub, E. B., & Thomas, N. (2005). Parental consent and the ethics of research with foster children: Beginning a cross-cultural dialogue. Qualitative Social Work, 4(3), pp. 271-292.

← Previous
Next →

Partners

Centre for Children and Young People
UNICEF

Contact

General
FAQ
Take Down Notice

Socials

Linkedin X-twitter Instagram

ERIC

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.

Newsletter

© 2024 Child Ethics . Made by c55 Creative
All Posts
  • All Posts
  • Posts (1020)
  • Pages (28)
  • CM Tooltip Glossary Pro+ (73)