母亲不透露孩子的生父:来自约翰内斯堡研究的方法反思

Livhuhani Manyatshe, M. Nduna
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引用次数: 2

摘要

由于缺乏对那些没有向孩子透露父亲真实生理身份的母亲的研究,因此缺乏关于研究这一主题的合适方法的信息。本文旨在分享该领域的一些方法论经验。对不认识亲生父亲的孩子的母亲或女性监护人进行了八次一对一的叙述性访谈。这项研究位于约翰内斯堡,探讨了导致生父未被披露的情况。参与者是通过滚雪球招募的,是一个非概率样本。他们的年龄在33岁到60岁之间。每位参与者都接受了一次采访。这里报告的方法论思考涉及招聘、面试和道德操守。这篇文章报道了招募中产阶级参与者的挑战,因为看门人认为这个话题很敏感,可能会对参与者产生法律影响。我们通过在线平台和面对面的社区公告报告招聘成功情况。虽然对招聘的反应很大,但并非所有感兴趣的人都有资格,包括不认识父亲的男性。在这项研究中,女性主要选择一对一访谈,而不是焦点小组讨论。保持完全隐私是一个挑战,因为一些参与者自己也同意在采访期间让其他家庭成员在附近。此外,在这个社区工作也带来了获取成员检查和接收成绩单反馈的挑战。本文报告了一些经验,这些经验与未来对低收入环境中妇女的类似研究有关。这篇文章建议采取对性别敏感的招聘策略,对针对没有透露父亲的女性的性别社会凝视保持敏感™孩子的身份。潜在参与者的积极反应表明,普通人群愿意与研究人员谈论未知父亲。听觉和视觉隐私等道德要求以及进行会员检查的必要性需要适应当地环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
MATERNAL NON-DISCLOSURE OF A CHILD’S BIOLOGICAL FATHER: METHODOLOGICAL REFLECTIONS FROM A JOHANNESBURG STUDY
Due to a dearth of research on mothers who have not disclosed the true biological identity of fathers to their children, there is lack of information on suitable methods for studying this topic. This article aims to share some methodological experiences from the field. Eight one-on-one narrative interviews were conducted with participants who were mothers or female guardians of a child who did not know his or her biological father. The study was located in Johannesburg and explored circumstances that contributed to non-disclosure of a biological father. Participants were recruited through snowballing and were a non-probability sample. They were aged between 33 and 60 years. Each participant was interviewed once. Methodological reflections reported here cover recruitment, interviews and ethics. This article reports a challenge with recruiting middle-class participants when gatekeepers felt that the topic was sensitive and may have legal repercussions for participants. We report on successful recruitment via online platforms and face-to-face community-based announcements. Whilst the response to recruitment was vast, not all interested parties were eligible, including men who did not know their fathers. Women in this study mainly opted for one-on-one interviews instead of focus group discussions. There was a challenge with maintaining complete privacy as some participants themselves agreedto have other family members nearby during the interview. Also, working in this community posed challenges with obtaining member-checking and receiving feedback on the transcripts. This article reports on a number of experiences that are relevant for future similar studies with women in low-income settings. The article suggests an adoption of gender-sensitive recruitment strategies with sensitivity regarding the gendered social gaze that is directed at women who have not disclosed the father’s identity to a child. The positive response from prospective participants indicated willingness from the general population to talk to researchers about unknown fathers. Ethical imperatives such as auditory and visual privacy and the imperative to conduct member checking need to be adapted for local contexts.
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