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Fieldwork with vulnerable populations

Published:01 January 2014Publication History
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Abstract

Ethical implications for human-computer interaction research

References

  1. Tri- Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct of Research Involving Humans, 2nd edition. 2010; http://pre.ethics.gc.ca/Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  2. Ethics Rupture: An Invitational Summit about Alternatives to Research-Ethics Review. St. Thomas University & University of New Brunswick, 2012.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  3. van den Hoonaard, W. Is research-ethics review a moral panic? Canadian Review of Sociology 38 (2001), 19--36.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  4. Guta, A. et al. Resisting the seduction of "ethics creep": Using Foucault to surface complexity and contradiction in research ethics review. J. Social Science & Medicine. 2012.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  5. C. Munteanu et al. "Showing off" your mobile device: Adult literacy learning in the classroom and beyond. Proc. MobileHCI '11. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  6. C. Munteanu et al. Tale of two studies: Challenges in field research with low-literacy adult learners in a developed country. Proc. CHI '12. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library

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  1. Fieldwork with vulnerable populations

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        • Published in

          cover image Interactions
          Interactions  Volume 21, Issue 1
          January - February 2014
          73 pages
          ISSN:1072-5520
          EISSN:1558-3449
          DOI:10.1145/2540069
          • Editors:
          • Ron Wakkary,
          • Erik Stolterman
          Issue’s Table of Contents

          Copyright © 2014 ACM

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          Association for Computing Machinery

          New York, NY, United States

          Publication History

          • Published: 1 January 2014

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