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Tag: reflexivity

Doing adulthood in childhood research.

Johansson, B. (2012). Doing adulthood in childhood research. Childhood, 19(1), pp. 101-114.

The active, competent child, capable of autonomous action: An inherent quality or the outcome of a research process?

Samuelsson, T., Sparrman, A., Cardell, D., & Lindgren, A.-L. (2015). The active, competent child, capable of autonomous action: An inherent quality or the outcome of a research process? AnthropoChildren, 5(July), pp. 1-19.

Situating children’s voices: Considering the context when conducting research with young children.

Khoja, N. (2016). Situating children’s voices: Considering the context when conducting research with young children. Children & Society, 30(4), pp. 314-323.

Researching children’s silences: Exploring the fullness of voice in childhood research.

Spyrou, S. (2016). Researching children’s silences: Exploring the fullness of voice in childhood research. Childhood, 23(1), pp. 7-21.

Ethical research with children: Untold narratives and taboos.

Richards, S., Clark, J., & Boggis, A. (2015). Ethical research with children: Untold narratives and taboos. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan. e-book ISBN: 978-1-137-35131-9.

Ethical issues facing researchers working with children in international contexts.

Asselin, M., & Doiron, R. (2016). Ethical issues facing researchers working with children in international contexts. Journal of Childhood Studies, 41(1), pp. 24-35.

Ethical beginnings: Reflexive questioning in designing child sexuality research.

Flanagan, P. (2014). Ethical beginnings: Reflexive questioning in designing child sexuality research. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 14(2), pp. 139-146.

Inviting the messy: Drawing methods and ‘children’s voices.’

Eldén, S. (2013). Inviting the messy: Drawing methods and ‘children’s voices’. Childhood, 20(1), pp. 66-81.

Children’s experiences of participating in research: Emotional moments together?

Hadfield-Hill, S., & Horton, J. (2014). Children’s experiences of participating in research: Emotional moments together? Children’s Geographies, 12(2), pp. 135-153.

Voice and the ethics of children’s agency in educational research.

O’Neill, J. (2014). Voice and the ethics of children’s agency in educational research. New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 49(2), pp. 219-232.

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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.

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