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Authority and ethics: A case for estrangement in educational research and research education

Version 2 2020-05-05, 10:34
Version 1 2020-05-05, 10:33
journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-05, 10:34 authored by Paul Dowling, Natasha Whiteman

This article focuses attention onto an underexamined issue in the literature on educational research ethics: how ethical authority is established in educational research. We address this from a perspective that disrupts naturalised approaches to ethics, arguing that rather than seeking ‘rights’ or ‘wrongs’ researchers are always tasked with constructing ethical stances. Attention can then be placed onto the array of embodied and objectified resources that might be recruited in establishing these. Through an engagement with published academic accounts of ethical reflection and decision-making, the article explores the ways that educational researchers achieve or sometimes question their ethical security in respect of their research activity. The analysis we present draws out the referential strategies that constitute ethical subjectivity and maps the diversity of anchoring points that might be recruited in this action. We also draw attention to the process of recontextualisation that is inevitable when one activity (or aspect of an activity) regards another, introducing necessary incoherence into ethical practice. The case we present celebrates rather than seeking to conceal or repair such disruption.

History

Citation

British Educational Research Journal (2020) In Press

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

British Educational Research Journal

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0141-1926

Acceptance date

2020-04-28

Copyright date

2020

Publisher version

TBA

Language

en

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