gogo
Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Research with high-risk populations : balancing science, ethics, and law / edited by David Buchanan, Celia B. Fisher, and Lance Gable.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: APA ebookPublication details: Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, 2009.Edition: 1st edDescription: viii, 266 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9781433804243
  • 9781433804243 (print ed.)
  • 1433804247 (print ed.)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: OriginalDDC classification:
  • 616.89027
LOC classification:
  • .R467 2009
Online resources: Also issued in print.
Contents:
Introduction / by David Buchanan, Celia Fisher, and Lance Gable -- Historical, theoretical, and legal perspectives -- Goodness-of-fit ethics for non-intervention research involving dangerous and illegal behaviors / by Celia B. Fisher and Sabrina J. Goodman -- Legal challenges raised by research conducted under high-risk circumstances / by Lance Gable -- Conducting research ethically -- Telephone surveys of traumatic experiences and other sensitive topics / by Jennifer J. Cercone, Carla Kmett Danielson, Kenneth J. Ruggiero, and Dean G. Kilpatrick -- Longitudinal research in school bullying : adolescents who bully and who are bullied / by Lang Ma, Erin Phelps, Jacqueline V. Lerner, and Richard M. Lerner -- Suicide in a natural history study : lessons and insights learned from a follow-up of Vietnam veterans at risk for suicide / by Rumi Kato Price, Li-Shiun Chen, Nathan K. Risk, Ashley Hughes Haden, Gregory A. Widner -- Using public data : illustrations from domestic violence research / by Catherine Cerulli and Chris Thomas -- Responding to threats of violence -- Ethical dilemmas in conducting field research with injection drug users / by David Buchanan -- Ethical and legal issues in conducting treatment research with potentially violent individuals / by Barry Rosenfeld and Debbie Green -- Do drug abuse researchers have a duty to protect third parties from hiv transmission? : moral perspectives of street drug users / by Celia B. Fisher, Matthew Oransky, Meena Mahadevan, Merrill Singer, Greg Mirhej, and G. Derrick Hodge -- Ethical and legal dilemmas in ethnographic field research : three case studies of distressed inner-city families / by Eloise Dunlap, Bruce D. Johnson and Doris Randolph -- Concluding thoughts -- Best practices for responding to threats of violence in research ethically and legally / by David Buchanan, Celia Fisher, and Lance Gable.
Summary: "This book provides in-depth analyses and guidance to social scientists regarding ethical and legal responsibilities that may arise in the course of conducting research with high-risk populations and in responding appropriately to threats of suicide, child abuse, and violence that may arise during the course of data collection. These discussions offer valuable lessons both for researchers who are planning to investigate the etiology of these particular problems and for researchers who may be confronted with similar threats of harm while investigating other health concerns such as HIV/AIDS or substance abuse. Because of the paucity of informed analyses of this critical topic area, researchers now find themselves caught between contradictory assumptions about the nature of the risks involved in descriptive research with populations at risk of violence and other harms. On the one hand, the traditional view has been that descriptive research poses minimal risk, as it is completely unlike medical experiments in which participants are exposed to novel experimental treatments. One common view is that if the research involves merely asking people questions, then the ethical risk of such research is limited to the harms that could emerge if confidential information were to be inadvertently disclosed. On the other hand, research with high-risk populations raises acute and appropriate questions for investigators, institutional review boards (IRBs), and other interested parties about a duty to protect: When or at what point does the threat of harm, such as suicide, child abuse, or violence, warrant overriding confidentiality protections?""--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).
No physical items for this record

IT Carlow ebook.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction / by David Buchanan, Celia Fisher, and Lance Gable -- Historical, theoretical, and legal perspectives -- Goodness-of-fit ethics for non-intervention research involving dangerous and illegal behaviors / by Celia B. Fisher and Sabrina J. Goodman -- Legal challenges raised by research conducted under high-risk circumstances / by Lance Gable -- Conducting research ethically -- Telephone surveys of traumatic experiences and other sensitive topics / by Jennifer J. Cercone, Carla Kmett Danielson, Kenneth J. Ruggiero, and Dean G. Kilpatrick -- Longitudinal research in school bullying : adolescents who bully and who are bullied / by Lang Ma, Erin Phelps, Jacqueline V. Lerner, and Richard M. Lerner -- Suicide in a natural history study : lessons and insights learned from a follow-up of Vietnam veterans at risk for suicide / by Rumi Kato Price, Li-Shiun Chen, Nathan K. Risk, Ashley Hughes Haden, Gregory A. Widner -- Using public data : illustrations from domestic violence research / by Catherine Cerulli and Chris Thomas -- Responding to threats of violence -- Ethical dilemmas in conducting field research with injection drug users / by David Buchanan -- Ethical and legal issues in conducting treatment research with potentially violent individuals / by Barry Rosenfeld and Debbie Green -- Do drug abuse researchers have a duty to protect third parties from hiv transmission? : moral perspectives of street drug users / by Celia B. Fisher, Matthew Oransky, Meena Mahadevan, Merrill Singer, Greg Mirhej, and G. Derrick Hodge -- Ethical and legal dilemmas in ethnographic field research : three case studies of distressed inner-city families / by Eloise Dunlap, Bruce D. Johnson and Doris Randolph -- Concluding thoughts -- Best practices for responding to threats of violence in research ethically and legally / by David Buchanan, Celia Fisher, and Lance Gable.

"This book provides in-depth analyses and guidance to social scientists regarding ethical and legal responsibilities that may arise in the course of conducting research with high-risk populations and in responding appropriately to threats of suicide, child abuse, and violence that may arise during the course of data collection. These discussions offer valuable lessons both for researchers who are planning to investigate the etiology of these particular problems and for researchers who may be confronted with similar threats of harm while investigating other health concerns such as HIV/AIDS or substance abuse. Because of the paucity of informed analyses of this critical topic area, researchers now find themselves caught between contradictory assumptions about the nature of the risks involved in descriptive research with populations at risk of violence and other harms. On the one hand, the traditional view has been that descriptive research poses minimal risk, as it is completely unlike medical experiments in which participants are exposed to novel experimental treatments. One common view is that if the research involves merely asking people questions, then the ethical risk of such research is limited to the harms that could emerge if confidential information were to be inadvertently disclosed. On the other hand, research with high-risk populations raises acute and appropriate questions for investigators, institutional review boards (IRBs), and other interested parties about a duty to protect: When or at what point does the threat of harm, such as suicide, child abuse, or violence, warrant overriding confidentiality protections?""--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2009 APA, all rights reserved).

Also issued in print.

Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. American Psychological Association 2009 Available via World Wide Web Access limited by licensing agreement s2009 dcunns

Powered by Koha