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Ethical Dimensions of Shared Ethnicity, Language, and Immigration Experience

Victoria, Mabel

Authors



Abstract

In this article I illustrate how some commonalities that I share with my participants―ethnic background, native language, and immigration experience―create unexpected ethical concerns. I explore how these commonalities facilitate the establishment of rapid intimacy, at the same time creating the temptations of overidentification and blurring the boundaries between researcher and participants. Drawing on three episodes from my ethnographic field work, I demonstrate how the mundane and taken-for-granted encounters with informants (used synonymously with participants) reveal the seeds of ethical dilemmas when put under the powerful and critical lens of reflexivity. Instead of viewing ethics as adherence to a set of codes, I explore reflexivity as ethical practice. Researchers continually make on-the-fly decisions in the field and take corresponding actions without the luxury of careful forethought. I argue that such decisions need to be unpacked after the event to examine if they carry ethical implications with them.

Citation

Victoria, M. (2011). Ethical Dimensions of Shared Ethnicity, Language, and Immigration Experience. TESL Canada Journal, 28, 72-79

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Apr 1, 2010
Publication Date Jul 31, 2011
Deposit Date Oct 17, 2016
Journal TESL Canada Journal
Print ISSN 0826-435X
Electronic ISSN 1925-8917
Publisher Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 28
Article Number 5
Pages 72-79
Keywords Ethics, reflexivity, data collection,
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/382111