Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Ethical Considerations for Postdisaster Fieldwork and Data Collection in the Caribbean

View through CrossRef
The postdisaster environment presents a multitude of ethical and logistical challenges for researchers interested in gathering timely and unpreserved data. Due to the unavailability of secondary data in the immediate aftermath of disasters, postdisaster researchers have become dependent on qualitative methods that involve engaging with disaster survivors as research participants. This is a common interaction in the Caribbean due to the region’s high occurrence of disasters and human participant engagement by external researchers during the postdisaster phase. However, due to escalating unethical practices since the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Caribbean nations are beginning the process of censuring unapproved postdisaster fieldwork by external researchers. In this study, the authors approach these ethical considerations through a justice lens to propose a checklist for postdisaster researchers interested in ethical fieldwork and justice for their research participants. Correspondence with Caribbean emergency managers confirms the negative perception toward external researchers and the trend of enacting protocols that stop unvetted community access following disasters. However, these local agencies acknowledge the benefits of ethical postdisaster research and are open to serving as research coordinating centers. Such coordinating centers would harness local capabilities and lower the likelihood of the duplication of research topics and the overburdening of survivors as research participants.
Title: Ethical Considerations for Postdisaster Fieldwork and Data Collection in the Caribbean
Description:
The postdisaster environment presents a multitude of ethical and logistical challenges for researchers interested in gathering timely and unpreserved data.
Due to the unavailability of secondary data in the immediate aftermath of disasters, postdisaster researchers have become dependent on qualitative methods that involve engaging with disaster survivors as research participants.
This is a common interaction in the Caribbean due to the region’s high occurrence of disasters and human participant engagement by external researchers during the postdisaster phase.
However, due to escalating unethical practices since the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Caribbean nations are beginning the process of censuring unapproved postdisaster fieldwork by external researchers.
In this study, the authors approach these ethical considerations through a justice lens to propose a checklist for postdisaster researchers interested in ethical fieldwork and justice for their research participants.
Correspondence with Caribbean emergency managers confirms the negative perception toward external researchers and the trend of enacting protocols that stop unvetted community access following disasters.
However, these local agencies acknowledge the benefits of ethical postdisaster research and are open to serving as research coordinating centers.
Such coordinating centers would harness local capabilities and lower the likelihood of the duplication of research topics and the overburdening of survivors as research participants.

Related Results

Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
ABSTRACTOn a global and regional scale, Indonesia has one of the least environmentally sustainable economies in the Asia-Pacific region. Consumption is one of the key factors contr...
Sports in Latin America and the Caribbean
Sports in Latin America and the Caribbean
Latin America and the Caribbean are regions that for more than 520 years have witnessed exceptional mixtures and exchanges of civilizations and cultures from all corners of the wor...
An Exploratory Study of Mathematics Anxiety in Caribbean Preservice Teachers
An Exploratory Study of Mathematics Anxiety in Caribbean Preservice Teachers
The Problem Correlational studies suggest that gender, attitudes to mathematics, mathematics performance, the number of college mathematics courses taken, and mathematics teacher ...
Decolonization, Otherness, and the Neglect of the Dutch Caribbean in Caribbean Studies
Decolonization, Otherness, and the Neglect of the Dutch Caribbean in Caribbean Studies
This essay traces the roots of marginalization of the Dutch Caribbean in Caribbean studies, approaching these roots as an integral part of a shared Caribbean intellectual history. ...
Virtual fieldwork in the Betic Cordillera, SE-Spain
Virtual fieldwork in the Betic Cordillera, SE-Spain
<p>The master’s degree programmes Earth Structure and Dynamics and Earth Life and Climate at Utrecht University, The Netherlands, include the option to ...
Spanish Caribbean Literature: A Heuristic for Colonial Caribbean Studies
Spanish Caribbean Literature: A Heuristic for Colonial Caribbean Studies
This essay reflects on the colonial Spanish Caribbean as a heuristic that enriches Caribbean studies. First, it meditates on the usefulness and limitations of applying the category...
Caribbean Foreign Policy
Caribbean Foreign Policy
Despite the near-absence of studies of the Caribbean within the mainstream of international relations (IR) theory and foreign policy analysis (FPA), as well as a tendency to subsum...
The future of tourism in an emerging economy: the reality of the cruise industry in Caribbean
The future of tourism in an emerging economy: the reality of the cruise industry in Caribbean
Purpose– In the face of newly industrialised nations, there is the tendency that there will be a shift or redirect of tourists from old tourism destinations to the newly industrial...

Back to Top