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OverviewThis Handbook provides an in-depth discussion on doing cross-cultural research more ethically, sensibly and responsibly with diverse groups of people around the globe. It focuses on cross-cultural research in the social sciences where researchers who are often from Western, educated and rich backgrounds are conducting research with individuals from different socio-cultural settings that are often non-Western, illiterate and poor. Covering both theoretical perspectives as well as practical ways to conduct research in cross-cultural settings, the contributors explore research work across Africa, Asia, Australasia, Europe and North America. Chapters provide keen insights into Indigenous research methods and approaches to cross-cultural research with a range of different groups of Indigenous peoples, highlighting the ethical and methodological challenges for researchers conducting cross-cultural research. Top scholars in the field suggest practical tips and information on lessons they have learnt to make this a useful tool kit for early-career researchers and students. This will be a critical read for students of development studies, transnational studies and anthropology who are interested in pursuing cross-cultural research in diverse settings. It is also an invigorating read for researchers who conduct cross-cultural research as well as those who work with people from ethnic minorities and refugees. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Pranee LiamputtongPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd ISBN: 9781800376618ISBN 10: 1800376618 Pages: 386 Publication Date: 13 December 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsContents: Preface xvi 1 Conducting cross-cultural research qualitatively in social science: setting the scene 1 Pranee Liamputtong PART I THEORETICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL FRAMEWORKS 2 Grounded ontologies: Indigenous methodologies in qualitative cross-cultural research 26 Marnee Shay, Grace Sarra and Annette Woods 3 Doing decolonial and indigenist research: a reflection 40 Lieketseng Ned, Mpoe Johannah Keikelame and Leslie Swartz 4 Kaupapa Māori research 56 Fiona Cram and Anna Adcock 5 Cultural insider–outsider: reflecting on positionality in shared and differing identities 85 Sonya Corbin Dwyer and Jennifer L. Buckle 6 Cultural sensibility in accessing participants in cross-cultural research 100 Rinchen Pelzang and Alison M. Hutchinson 7 Researcher’s refusals: ethical dilemmas, ethical practices in qualitative research. Interviews on the Thailand–Myanmar border 121 Nisha Toomey PART II QUALITATIVE CROSS-CULTURAL RESEARCH METHODS IN SOCIAL SCIENCE 8 Cross-cultural interviewing 142 Gabriele Griffin 9 Critical narrative inquiry as psychosocial accompaniment with Aboriginal communities 160 Amy Quayle and Christopher Sonn 10 Cross-lingual focus groups in cross-cultural community-based participatory research 180 Maira Quintanilha and Maria Mayan 11 Life histories and life diagrams 196 Johanna Söderström 12 The walking interview in cross-cultural research 214 Nigel Hunt and Danila D’Errico 13 Intercultural research: Aboriginal young people and the digital storytelling process as knowledge exchange 233 Fran Edmonds, Richard Chenhall and Emily Munro-Harrison 14 Body mapping: an empowering method for ethnoanatomical and ethnophysiological insights in qualitative research 256 Heather Julie Wallace 15 Ethnographic methods in cross-cultural research 273 Roseanne C. Schuster, Amber Wutich, Alexandra Brewis and Cindi SturtzSreetharan 16 Indigenising photovoice: infusing Māori cultural values into Western research methods 290 Glenis Mark and Amohia Boulton 17 Decolonising community-based participatory research: applying arts-based methods to transformative learning spaces 309 Carolyn M. Melro and Clifford T. Ballantyne 18 Cross-cultural community gardening as an Indigenist methodology: a learning ceremonial journey from a colour settler perspective 324 Ranjan Datta 19 Transnational cross-cultural research: modern challenges and solutions for field access, data collection, and analysis 335 Anson Au Index 356Reviews'The book provides an impressive and comprehensive set of views and methodological perspectives on how to be a true respectful and culturally sensitive cross-cultural researcher. Pranee Liamputtong has assembled a diverse group of contributors that include academics, field researchers and indigenous people; describing different approaches that range from community art to gardening. A must read!' -- Maurizio Trevisan, VinUniversity, Vietnam 'This seminal book makes the critical contribution that cross-cultural research traditions are valid on and of their own. It is a major deconstruction of research approaches that privilege coloniality perspectives, challenging the predominant western research approaches and interpretations, and inviting alternative research culture values and orientations. Readers will gain new insights on the undoing of the neo-colonial polemics that inclusiveness and diversity in scholarly traditions is not just politics interfering with research practices, but that the research enterprise in the social sciences, like the personal, is political. The book makes the compelling argument that imported research traditions to cultural communities underplay or are dismissive of the real harm of coloniality to constructing authentic knowledge of and for cultural communities. This Handbook makes a clear, logical build-up to theoretical and conceptual frameworks of cross-cultural research approaches in the context of contemporary literature and elaborates on the implications of indigenist traditions for research practice, training, policy, and future directions.' -- Elias Mpofu, University of North Texas, US; University of Sydney, Australia; and University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa 'Professor Liamputtong has created a landmark work that will be essential reading for ALL researchers. This book addresses the most complex challenges we have in international research today - of equity, diversity, inclusion, indigeneity, and accessibility. A powerful and needed work for the times.' -- Allan Kellehear, University of Vermont, US 'This seminal book volume makes that critical contribution on cross-cultural research traditions are valid on and of their own. It is a major deconstruction of research approaches that privilege coloniality perspectives, challenging the predominant western research approaches and interpretations, and inviting alternative research culture values and orientations. Readers will gain new insights on the undoing of the neo-colonial polemics that inclusiveness and diversity in scholarly traditions is not just politics interfering with research practices, but that the research enterprise in the social sciences, like the personal, is political. The book makes the compelling argument that imported research traditions to cultural communities underplay or are dismissive of the real harm of coloniality to constructing authentic knowledge of and for cultural communities. This book volume makes a clear, logical build-up to theoretical and conceptual frameworks of cross-cultural research approaches in the context of contemporary literature and elaborates on the implications of indigenist traditions for research practice, training, policy, and future directions.' -- Elias Mpofu, University of North Texas, US; University of Sydney, Australia; and University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa 'Professor Liamputtong has created a landmark work that will be essential reading for ALL researchers. This book addresses the most complex challenges we have in international research today - of equity, diversity, inclusion, indigeneity, and accessibility. A powerful and needed work for the times.' -- Allan Kellehear, University of Vermont, US ‘The book provides an impressive and comprehensive set of views and methodological perspectives on how to be a true respectful and culturally sensitive cross-cultural researcher. Pranee Liamputtong has assembled a diverse group of contributors that include academics, field researchers and indigenous people; describing different approaches that range from community art to gardening. A must read!’ -- Maurizio Trevisan, VinUniversity, Vietnam ‘This seminal book makes the critical contribution that cross-cultural research traditions are valid on and of their own. It is a major deconstruction of research approaches that privilege coloniality perspectives, challenging the predominant western research approaches and interpretations, and inviting alternative research culture values and orientations. Readers will gain new insights on the undoing of the neo-colonial polemics that inclusiveness and diversity in scholarly traditions is not just politics interfering with research practices, but that the research enterprise in the social sciences, like the personal, is political. The book makes the compelling argument that imported research traditions to cultural communities underplay or are dismissive of the real harm of coloniality to constructing authentic knowledge of and for cultural communities. This Handbook makes a clear, logical build-up to theoretical and conceptual frameworks of cross-cultural research approaches in the context of contemporary literature and elaborates on the implications of indigenist traditions for research practice, training, policy, and future directions.’ -- Elias Mpofu, University of North Texas, US; University of Sydney, Australia; and University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa ‘Professor Liamputtong has created a landmark work that will be essential reading for ALL researchers. This book addresses the most complex challenges we have in international research today – of equity, diversity, inclusion, indigeneity, and accessibility. A powerful and needed work for the times.’ -- Allan Kellehear, University of Vermont, US 'The book provides an impressive and comprehensive set of views and methodological perspectives on how to be a true respectful and culturally sensitive cross-cultural researcher. Pranee Liamputtong has assembled a diverse group of contributors that include academics, field researchers and indigenous people; describing different approaches that range from community art to gardening. A must read!' -- Maurizio Trevisan, VinUniversity, Vietnam 'This seminal book volume makes that critical contribution on cross-cultural research traditions are valid on and of their own. It is a major deconstruction of research approaches that privilege coloniality perspectives, challenging the predominant western research approaches and interpretations, and inviting alternative research culture values and orientations. Readers will gain new insights on the undoing of the neo-colonial polemics that inclusiveness and diversity in scholarly traditions is not just politics interfering with research practices, but that the research enterprise in the social sciences, like the personal, is political. The book makes the compelling argument that imported research traditions to cultural communities underplay or are dismissive of the real harm of coloniality to constructing authentic knowledge of and for cultural communities. This book volume makes a clear, logical build-up to theoretical and conceptual frameworks of cross-cultural research approaches in the context of contemporary literature and elaborates on the implications of indigenist traditions for research practice, training, policy, and future directions.' -- Elias Mpofu, University of North Texas, US; University of Sydney, Australia; and University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa 'Professor Liamputtong has created a landmark work that will be essential reading for ALL researchers. This book addresses the most complex challenges we have in international research today - of equity, diversity, inclusion, indigeneity, and accessibility. A powerful and needed work for the times.' -- Allan Kellehear, University of Vermont, US Author InformationEdited by Pranee Liamputtong, Professor in Behaviour Sciences, College of Health Sciences, VinUniversity, Vietnam Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |