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Ethical tensions are part of the everyday practice of doing research—all kinds of research. How do researchers deal with ethical problems that arise in the practice of their research, and are there conceptual frameworks that they can draw on to assist them? This article examines the relationship between reflexivity and research ethics. It focuses on what constitutes ethical research practice in qualitative research and how researchers achieve ethical research practice. As a framework for thinking through these issues, the authors distinguish two different dimensions of ethics in research, which they term procedural ethics and “ethics in practice.” The relationship between them and the impact that each has on the actual doing of research are examined. The article then draws on the notion of reflexivity as a helpful way of understanding both the nature of ethics in qualitative research and how ethical practice in research can be achieved.
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Marilys Guillemin
The University of Melbourne
Lynn Gillam
Royal Children's Hospital
Qualitative Inquiry
The University of Melbourne
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Guillemin et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d814d68c03fbaff8bed902 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1077800403262360