| Literature DB >> 27563284 |
Annalee Yassi1, Jennifer Beth Spiegel2, Karen Lockhart1, Lynn Fels3, Katherine Boydell4, Judith Marcuse3.
Abstract
Academics from diverse disciplines are recognizing not only the procedural ethical issues involved in research, but also the complexity of everyday "micro" ethical issues that arise. While ethical guidelines are being developed for research in aboriginal populations and low-and-middle-income countries, multi-partnered research initiatives examining arts-based interventions to promote social change pose a unique set of ethical dilemmas not yet fully explored. Our research team, comprising health, education, and social scientists, critical theorists, artists and community-activists launched a five-year research partnership on arts-for-social change. Funded by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council in Canada and based in six universities, including over 40 community-based collaborators, and informed by five main field projects (circus with street youth, theatre by people with disabilities, dance for people with Parkinson's disease, participatory theatre with refugees and artsinfused dialogue), we set out to synthesize existing knowledge and lessons we learned. We summarized these learnings into 12 key points for reflection, grouped into three categories: community-university partnership concerns (n = 3), dilemmas related to the arts (n = 5), and team issues (n = 4). In addition to addressing previous concerns outlined in the literature (e.g., related to consent, anonymity, dangerous emotional terrain, etc.), we identified power dynamics (visible and hidden) hindering meaningful participation of community partners and university-based teams that need to be addressed within a reflective critical framework of ethical practice. We present how our team has been addressing these issues, as examples of how such concerns could be approached in community-university partnerships in arts for social change.Entities:
Keywords: Collaboration; Community-university-artist partnered research; Ethics in teams; Interdisciplinarity; Team dynamics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27563284 PMCID: PMC4981172 DOI: 10.1007/s10805-016-9257-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acad Ethics ISSN: 1570-1727
Summary of ethical dilemmas and possible reflective approaches to resolutions we identified
| Ethical dilemma | Description | Possible approach |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Ethical issues related to community-university partnering | ||
| 1.1 Ethics of meaningful participation | Community partners in organizations with limited funding, as well as independent artists engaged with academics in collaborative research, have to volunteer their time to participate in the research, while those hired for the research, or leading the research based at universities are funded for their participation; this situation creates a power imbalance in ability to participate in a research partnership. | Research teams need to be sensitive to this economic imbalance and seek creative solutions that do not violate funding rules; our experience suggests that means can be found to provide at least partial remuneration for research contributions while keeping within guidelines. Simultaneously, funding rules need to be challenged so as to address current funding inequities. |
| 1.2 Ethics of consent | There are constraints as to who can easily provide consent (e.g., only those over 18; people with enough literacy and time to read detailed text-heavy materials imposed by Research Ethics Boards (REBs) and who are not considered about signing documents for other reasons such as illegal presence in the country; these constraints can result in excluding important components of the populations, if taken too literally. Conversely individuals declining consent is important to document as well, analyzing why this refusal is occurring. | Consent needs to be made context-sensitive and flexible to avoid excluding the voices of marginalized populations while at the same time carefully respecting the rights of individuals and communities to refrain from engaging in the research process; reflecting on underlying socioeconomic and political power dynamics may help explain reluctance and indeed refusals of individuals to participate. |
| 1.3 Ethics of raising false expectations | Community partners often expect faster turn-around times in output production than research allows; it Is essential that the community partners understand the time-frame to output production as well as limits of the research to avoid false expectations. | Good communication is essential at the outset to ensure clear understanding of priorities/needs of all involved in terms of time-frame and impact; researchers must responsibly ensure that the community partner is clearly aware of the limitations of the study with respect to the speed at which research outputs would be produced, what questions would be answered, and what, if any, the likely impact of the research will be with respect to social change, as participants define it. |
| 2. Issues related to the inclusion of Arts-Based Research and Research in the Humanities | ||
| 2.1 Ethics of stifling creativity in participatory action research: protocol rigidly hampering artistic process | Sometimes unanticipated opportunities arise that are desirable to pursue, e.g., opportunity to film an artistic process (with consent of participants), or conduct informal interviews at an arts show, training session or other community event; strictly speaking, if ethics approval has not been obtained in advance, this is not supposed to be done – but would constitute an unfortunate lost opportunity to improve the quality of the research. | Guidelines for ethical practices are essential but these should leave room for flexibility to accommodate the unpredictable nature of community-engaged arts-based research that may present important research opportunities. Here, attention to procedural ethics could be framed as in a dialectical relationship with microethics, so that ethical principles guide reflective practice. |
| 2.2 Ethics of authorship and ownership of arts-based intervention products | Creative collaboration leading to the generation of art raises questions relating to authorship and ownership of the work; consent to use the work; and the truthfulness or adequacy of the work as a representation of participants’ experiences. | Researchers should be encouraged to create written agreements about ownership within the research team and with participants that reflect the needs and sensibilities of all. This could be approached as a procedural ethical issue, with flexibility to reflect and adapt as conditions require. |
| 2.3 Right of acknowledgement versus protection of anonymity | There is a tension between the goal of anonymity and protecting vulnerable participants on one side, and the desired goal of stigma reduction strategies that promote speaking out. Further, participants sometimes want their identity to be known, as they are proud of their contribution and want their insights offered to the researchers to be openly attributable to them. | If future consequences are properly explained in a manner that is understood by participants, they should be allowed to determine whether or not they want to be identified and should have the right to change their position during the research period. |
| 2.4 Ethics of dangerous emotional terrain | In ASC projects, the goal is often to push participants beyond their typical comfort zones and expose them to varied perspectives and experiences in a meaningful manner; there arise ethical challenges associated with the danger of encountering difficult, emotionally charged, risky and traumatic issues, as well as “undoing” participants’ previous conceptions. | Artist/researchers should have permission to explore emotionally-charged topics as long as they are trained to deal with potential problems and have informed support available for everyone involved including the artists/ researchers, themselves; training is key. Moreover, researchers should be cognizant that their own values will inevitably influence the process and care must be taken to avoid imposing dominant values. |
| 2.5 Ethics of representation | Misrepresentation of art can easily happen, and there are ethical implications of divergent interpretations. | Taking preliminary “results” back to artist participants for feedback would be a good practice. Another is to establish a monitor for the group during the interpretation process. |
| 3. Team issues | ||
| 3.1 Ethics of caring for team members, students and staff | Ethics of team relations – and valuing all team members through taking care of their material and emotional needs - is part of the imperative of the research. | Always keep the wellbeing of all team members, and team dynamics in the forefront, being willing to challenge institutional norms if necessary. |
| 3.2 Ethics of researcher engagement and commitment | Different researchers shoulder different responsibilities and contribute different levels of commitment, and time. Sometimes these are known from the start; sometimes work or family commitments outside the project impact on originally envisioned commitments; this creates dilemmas for other team members and partners. | Time commitments should be made transparent to all at the beginning and reviewed periodically; regular “check-ins” need to be planned to take unforeseen circumstances into account. |
| 3.3 Ethics of expanding the team after the project is in process | Research is increasingly becoming a collective endeavor, and often researchers and artists seek to co-research and co-create with colleagues, friends, and those with whom there is a shared recognition of theoretical resonance, expertise, perspective and previous lived experience, sometimes only discovering this resonance after the project has started. | Clearly stated criteria for inviting colleagues and partners should be articulated at the beginning of the process; bringing in new expertise must be undertaken with dialogue with original team members to ensure that the new recruit would not undermine the complex research dynamics in any way. |
| 3.4 Ethics of interdisciplinarity – different cultures of publication, collaboration, and notions of ethical research | There are very different cultures in different disciplines, such that what in unethical in one discipline might be the norm in another – with respect to norms in publishing, extending invitation to co-author, how collaboration is conducted and indeed what constitutes ethical research practice. | Teams of artists, community activists and scholars from different disciplines, must openly discuss the varied needs and expectations with respect to authorship, collaboration and the implications of one approach to research on the integrity for another. Critical theorists, arts-based researchers, qualitative and quantitative research do not easily mesh – therefore mixed methods studies attempting to embody both approaches need to engage in considerable dialogue and reflection at all stages of the research. |