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Community Power Structure Analysis and the Ethical Considerations of “Studying Up”
Authors:Natalie M Kivell  Scotney D Evans  Susan E Paterson
Institution:Department of Educational and Psychological Studies, School of Education and Human Development, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA
Abstract:This narrative outlines our challenges in studying power and power structures within an individual‐level ethical framework. Taking a social ethics perspective, we share the story of our “sticky situation” (Campbell, 2016 ) that transpired during a multi‐year community partnership. We were asked, by our community partners, to help collect interview data without informed consent. As a team of community‐engaged university researchers, we were faced with a seemingly easy ethical situation (no consent, no research) that had unexpectedly complicated and long‐lasting consequences. This experience revealed to us how community‐engaged research and action, under a traditional ethics framework, can often work to protect those in positions of power and offer little to disrupt the status quo. Reflecting on the tension between individual and social ethics, we discuss the limitations of an individual‐level framework, including the definitions for respect for persons, justice, and beneficence, on our ability as a field to understand, critique, and contribute to the dismantling of oppressive power structures.
Keywords:Ethics  Social ethics  Power  Informed consent  Community‐engaged research  Critical scholarship
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