TY - BOOK AU - Block,Karen AU - Riggs,Elisha AU - Haslam,Nick TI - Values and vulnerabilities: the ethics of research with refugees and asylum seekers SN - 1922117137 AV - DR U1 - 342.083 23 PY - 2013/// CY - Toowong, QLD PB - Australian Academic Press KW - Political refugees KW - Research N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Part 1. Ethical Frameworks and Key Concepts -- Part 2. Methodological Approaches to Ethical Research -- Part 3. Advocacy and Politics- Considering the Ramifications of Research -- --; Part 1; Ethical Frameworks and Key Concepts --; 1; Ethics in Research With Refugees and Asylum Seekers : Processes, Power and Politics; Karen Block, Elisha Riggs, and Nick Haslam --; 2; Ethical Considerations in Refugee Research: What Guidance Do Formal Research Ethics Documents Offer?; Lynn Gillam --; 3; To Respect or Protect? Whose Values Shape the Ethics of Refugee Research?; Sandy Gifford -- --; Part 2; Methodological Approaches to Ethical Research --; 4; Researching Displacement(s); Christopher McDowell --; 5; The Ethical Implications of the Researcher's Dominant Position in Cross: Cultural Refugee Research; Marinella Marmo --; 6; The Role of Respect in Research Interactions With Refugee Children and Young People; Jeanette A. Lawrence, Ida Kaplan, and Colleen McFarlane --; 7; Ethical Approaches in Research With Refugees and Asylum Seekers Using Participatory Action Research; Hariz Halilovich --; 8; Doing Ethical Research: 'Whose Problem Is It Anyway?'; Eileen Pittaway and Linda Bartolomei -- --; Part 3; Advocacy and Politics: Considering the Ramifications of Research --; 9; Researching Immigration Detention:Documenting Damage and Ethical Dilemmas; Louise Newman --; 10; On Secrets and Lies: Dangerous Information, Stigma and Asylum Seeker Research; Deborah Zion --; 11; Face to Face: Ethics and Responsibility; Mammad Aidani N2 - "Forced migration is a global issue. About 34 million of the world's inhabitants were identified in 2010 by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees as either refugees, internally displaced persons, asylum seekers or stateless people. Systematic inquiries are urgently needed to understand and improve the circumstances in which these people live, and to guide national and international policies and programs. However, there are many ethical complications in conducting research with uprooted people, who have often been exposed to persecution and marginalisation in conflict situations, refugee camps, immigration detention settings, and following resettlement. This book brings together for the first time key scholars across a range of disciplines including anthropology, bioethics, public health, criminology, psychology, socio-linguistics, philosophy, psychiatry, social policy and social work to discuss the ethical dimensions, challenges and tensions of such research. It encompasses the theoretical, conceptual, practical, and applied aspects of research ethics, while integrating different disciplinary perspectives. It is intended as a resource not only for researchers, students and practitioners but also for those conducting cross-cultural research more broadly. Many of its arguments, examples and concerns are pertinent to research with other vulnerable or marginalised populations. "--Publisher's website ER -