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Ethical Issues in Linguistic Fieldwork

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Title: Ethical Issues in Linguistic Fieldwork


1
Ethical Issues in Linguistic Fieldwork
  • Yuni Kim
  • University of Manchester
  • yuni.kim_at_manchester.ac.uk

2
Ethical review
  • Linguistic field research typically requires
    ethical approval
  • Proposals must be submitted to university
    committees before any research starts
  • Protection of human subjects
  • What ethical problems do you need to address in
    your statement that is, in planning your
    research?

3
Why me? Why my project?
  • Some research clearly needs human subjects
    review testing novel medicines inducing
    distress in psychological studies
  • Phonetics tracheal punctures
  • Linguistic fieldwork? Talking to people?
  • Ethical issues do require careful thought...
  • even more so because fieldwork IS different,
    and standard protocols are not always appropriate

4
Some basic principles
  • Dont do anything against someones will
  • Dont inconvenience people or do things that will
    make them regret working with you
  • Reciprocity
  • Do be sensitive to local culture and community
    dynamics, and your place in it
  • Be respectful and keep an open mind
  • Concrete ways of following these principles may
    be highly situation-specific

5
The Planning Stage
  • Deciding what language or language variety to
    work on
  • Motivations general-linguistic, cultural,
    specific-linguistic... adventure...
  • Will you and your work be welcome?
  • Are your goals ethically feasible?
  • Essential to make preliminary contacts and feel
    out the situation avoid pressuring
  • Cf. colonialist/imperialist paradigm

6
Permission to Research
  • A privilege, not a right
  • Will you need official consent from community
    leaders (e.g. chief, elders)?
  • How do you build trust a prerequisite?
  • Sincerity necessary, but usually not sufficient
  • Intermediate contacts who are already known and
    trusted in the community
  • Invest time building relationships with people
  • Effects of power asymmetries

7
Informed Consent
  • When you find people willing to work with you,
    you must obtain informed consent
  • Advance understanding of what you are doing, and
    what they will be asked to do
  • Be specific
  • Freedom to withdraw at any time
  • Overt agreement to participate
  • Must be documented

8
Written vs. Oral Consent
  • Ethical review committees often want to see a
    signed, contract-like document
  • Not appropriate to many field situations
  • What if people dont read and write?
  • Can create rather than relieve suspicion -
    signing away rights
  • Oral agreements may be held in higher esteem
  • Reading a prepared statement?

9
Obtaining Oral Consent
  • Better have a natural conversation where you
    explain everything, ask for permission
  • This is an important conversation to have its
    not just for the committee
  • You need to judge the success of the
    communication, their ability to give consent
  • You can have natural conversations first, then
    ask to record a less natural version

10
Anonymity
  • Generic human subjects protocols require you to
    guarantee anonymity
  • Not always appropriate for fieldwork
  • People may want to be acknowledged you may want
    to acknowledge them
  • Alternatively, there may be cultural or personal
    reasons not to use names
  • You need to find out what they want

11
Making Recordings
  • Always need informed consent to record
  • Why would anyone do covert recording?
  • People get unnatural when the mikes out
  • Spontaneous events no time to stop and ask
  • You dont know if theyd give permission, but
    its reeeaaally good/valuable material
  • These reasons generally dont fly
  • Use a less obtrusive microphone... be patient and
    continue to develop trust

12
Making Recordings
  • Unforeseen sensitive topics can come up
  • Participants should be able to stop recording at
    any time, or ask to delete material after its
    been recorded
  • Passers-by unintentional covert recording
  • In such cases, it may be acceptable to get
    post-hoc consent, as soon as possible

13
Access to Recordings
  • What happens to the recordings?
  • Who will be able to listen to them? Just you?
    Local people? Anyone at all?
  • Archiving
  • Public vs. restricted access
  • Restrictions by type of material
  • Try to foresee every possible future use or
    audience and find out how the person feels
  • Later, it may be impossible to get permission

14
Compensation
  • How do you compensate people for the time and
    expertise they share with you?
  • Monetary payment is common
  • By the hour/session/etc.
  • Presentation style matters
  • Pay well, but not so much that it creates the
    potential for coercion
  • When working with different people, keep
    fairness in mind

15
Non-monetary compensation
  • Some people may not want to accept money
  • Other ways to compensate people
  • Buying food, medicine
  • Doing housework or running errands
  • Find out how you can be useful
  • You may want to do this even if you are also
    paying them

16
Wider Considerations
  • To what extent do ethics dictate the content of
    your research?
  • What ethical obligations do you have to the
    community linguistic, sociopolitical?
  • General behavior humility rarely regretted
  • Unforeseen issues developing judgment
  • Balancing the desire to share expertise with
    caution about imposing ideologies

17
Thank you!
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