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. 2009 Jun;15(2):135-60.
doi: 10.1007/s11948-008-9105-2. Epub 2008 Nov 26.

Piercing the veil: ethical issues in ethnographic research

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Piercing the veil: ethical issues in ethnographic research

Brian Schrag. Sci Eng Ethics. 2009 Jun.

Abstract

It is not unusual for researchers in ethnography (and sometimes Institutional Review Boards) to assume that research of "public" behavior is morally unproblematic. I examine an historical case of ethnographic research and the sustained moral outrage to the research expressed by the subjects of that research. I suggest that the moral outrage was legitimate and articulate some of the ethical issues underlying that outrage. I argue that morally problematic Ethnographic research of public behavior can derive from research practice that includes a tendency to collapse the distinction between harm and moral wrong, a failure to take account of recent work on ethical issues in privacy; failure to appreciate the deception involved in ethnographers' failure to reveal their role as researchers to subjects and finally a failure to appropriately weigh the moral significance of issues of invasion of privacy and inflicted insight in both the research process and subsequent publication of research.

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References

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