In search of epistemic justice. Dialogical reflection of researchers on situated ethics in studies with people living with language and/or cognitive impairment

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Barbara Groot , Annette Hendrikx , Elena Bendien , Susan Woelders , Lieke de Kock , Tineke Abma
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background

Academics aim to understand the experiences of people living with cognitive and/or language impairment in their search for epistemic justice. Methods that do not rely solely on verbal information (e.g., interviews, focus groups) but also employ an attunement to the non-verbal - such as participant observation and creative methods, are seen as a suitable way to do justice to people's non-verbal interactions. However, in practice, researchers still experience ethical issues in everyday encounters with participants with cognitive and/or language impairment even when trying to address epistemic issues while employing such methods. This article aims to demonstrate 1) the importance of attending to the non-verbal in order to prevent epistemic injustice in research and 2) how a case-study approach and discussing ethical dilemmas with peers may help to unpack some of the ethical tensions that the researchers experience.

Aim and methods

This article focuses on ethical dilemmas the authors encountered during their research projects in the past. Three cases chosen by the authors illustrate these dilemmas. Dilemmas are presented as auto-ethnographical written accounts, which were discussed during ten retrospective dialogical sessions (60–90 min) organized by the research group consisting of six academic researchers.

Results

Ethically sound research, in which older people living with cognitive and/or language impairment are engaged, entails much more than following procedures about informed consent, privacy, submitting a proposal to an ethics committee, and using suitable methods and techniques. Ethical issues in these studies relate to everyday situations in which researchers tried to do justice to the knowledge of people who have difficulties expressing themselves verbally, but were challenged by what they have initially experienced as ‘having it wrong,’ ‘not knowing,’ and ‘losing something in translation’ in their practice. Finally, we learned that the interactions the researchers encountered were complex. They had to constantly evaluate the appropriateness of their approach, balance rational and intuitive forms of interaction and interpretation, and consider ways of communicating the research findings.

Discussion and conclusion

Approximating epistemic justice in research with people with cognitive and/or language impairment requires extra effort in daily research routines. Sharing everyday ethical issues via case stories and reflecting on these issues encourages moral learning and brings new knowledge about the craftsmanship of researchers. Especially the collaborative and dialogical reflection helped the researchers to dig deeper and find words for intangible processes that often remain unaddressed. However, sharing stories about ethical issues requires mutual trust and safety because sharing and reflecting may bring discomfort, messiness, and uncertainty.

寻求认识正义。研究人员在语言和/或认知障碍患者研究中对情境伦理学的对话反思
背景学术界旨在了解认知和/或语言障碍患者在寻求认知正义过程中的经历。不仅依赖于口头信息的方法(如访谈、焦点小组),而且还采用了与非语言相适应的方法,如参与者观察和创造性方法,被视为公正对待人们非语言互动的合适方法。然而,在实践中,研究人员在日常与认知和/或语言障碍参与者的接触中仍然会遇到伦理问题,即使在使用这些方法的同时试图解决认知问题。本文旨在证明1)关注非语言的重要性,以防止研究中的认识不公正;2)案例研究方法和与同行讨论道德困境如何有助于解开研究人员所经历的一些道德紧张关系。目的和方法本文着重于作者在过去的研究项目中遇到的伦理困境。作者选择的三个案例说明了这些困境。困境以自民族志书面叙述的形式呈现,在由六名学术研究人员组成的研究小组组织的十次回顾性对话会议(60-90分钟)中进行了讨论。结果有认知和/或语言障碍的老年人参与的合乎道德的研究,需要的远不止遵循知情同意、隐私、向道德委员会提交提案以及使用适当的方法和技术等程序。这些研究中的伦理问题与日常情况有关,在日常情况下,研究人员试图公正地对待那些在口头上表达自己有困难的人,但他们在实践中最初经历的“有错”、“不知道”和“在翻译中失去了东西”等挑战。最后,我们了解到研究人员遇到的互动是复杂的。他们必须不断评估他们的方法的适当性,平衡理性和直观的互动和解释形式,并考虑传达研究结果的方式。讨论和结论在对认知和/或语言障碍患者的研究中接近认知公正需要在日常研究中付出额外的努力。通过案例故事分享日常伦理问题并反思这些问题可以鼓励道德学习,并带来关于研究人员工艺的新知识。尤其是合作和对话式的反思帮助研究人员更深入地挖掘,并为那些往往未被处理的无形过程找到词语。然而,分享有关道德问题的故事需要相互信任和安全,因为分享和反思可能会带来不适、混乱和不确定性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
17.40%
发文量
70
审稿时长
50 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Aging Studies features scholarly papers offering new interpretations that challenge existing theory and empirical work. Articles need not deal with the field of aging as a whole, but with any defensibly relevant topic pertinent to the aging experience and related to the broad concerns and subject matter of the social and behavioral sciences and the humanities. The journal emphasizes innovations and critique - new directions in general - regardless of theoretical or methodological orientation or academic discipline. Critical, empirical, or theoretical contributions are welcome.
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