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Research Ethics

Research Ethics . If objectivity is impossible, should we pursue advocacy research"? We run the risk of social research becoming propaganda or advertising!Total objectivity may be unattainable..but we can still strive to be as objective as possible. . General guidelines for minimi

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Research Ethics

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    1. Research Ethics Accurate generalizations require us to minimize the impact of bias. Bias is anything that can lead us to a particular interpretation or conclusion. Research bias is the distortion of results so they reflect personal bias.

    2. Research Ethics If objectivity is impossible, should we pursue advocacy research? We run the risk of social research becoming propaganda or advertising! Total objectivity may be unattainable..but we can still strive to be as objective as possible.

    3. General guidelines for minimizing bias Be skepticaldistinguish strongly-supported conclusions & weakly-supported or speculative conclusions. Be aware of your values & preferences and try to limit their effect on observations, analysis & interpretation. Avoid gender and culture bias. Avoid disclosing your hypotheses to subjectsto reduce expectancy bias.

    4. General guidelines for minimizing bias Base research on theorydeduce hypotheses from theory. Orient research to disconfirmation. Specify hypotheses & methodology in advance.

    5. Ethics in Social Research As sociological methods have become more powerful, concerns over ethics have mounted. Research involves both scientific issues & ethical issues. Ethical issues arise from: (1) problems being studied, (2) research setting, (3) procedures, (4) participants, (5) type of data being collected.

    6. Classic social research & ethical dilemmas Laud Humphreys study of male homosexual encounters in public washrooms (the tearoom trade). Most who frequented tearooms were very conventional guys who saw themselves as heterosexual! An ethical firestorm involving consent, confidentiality, aiding in crime, and undue pressure on respondents.

    7. Milgrams research on Obedience to Authority: The experiment brought 2 people together in a lab for a study on learning. Each real subject (teacher) was paired with a confederate of Milgrama learner who was really a professional actor . Subject-teachers & confederate-learners were put in separate rooms. Following Milgrams instructions, subject-teachers administered an escalating set of electric shocks to confederate-learners whenever the latter made an error. Up to 2/3 of the subject-teachers obeyed Milgram and administered the maximum electric shock, ostensibly 450 volts, to the confederate-learners!!

    8. Milgrams subjects experienced anxiety, distress, seizures, uncontrollable gigglingand guilt once they found out what was really going on. Milgrams research helps explain why atrocities can occur. His research also highlighted major ethical concerns on issues of informed consent, deception, and distress or harm to subjects. Zimbardos research on how social context and roles can create abusive (and submissive) behavior added to the knowledge gained from Milgram, and raised similar ethical issues!

    9. Making ethical research decisions Balance the need to gain knowledge with the need to protect participants. Costs: anxiety, embarrassment, loss of dignity and/or privacy, psychosocial harm. Benefits: advances in knowledge, psychosocial & financial rewards.

    10. Basic ethical guidelines: Informed consent; Reasonably informed consent (explain major goals & procedures, describe benefits / costs, explain how respondent was chosen, answer questions, emphasize participation is voluntary). Confidentiality & Anonymity (once field work is finished destroy all identifying information; data sets securely stored & contain no identifying information; publish results in aggregate or use pseudonyms). Avoid placing undue pressure on participants. Minimize the costs of participation. Do follow-up interviews or debriefings with experiments or quasi-experiments.

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