Article written by 2008 DPDF Animal Studies Fellow and 2009 IDRF Program Fellow Clare Gupta and Alice B. Kelly:

The project of this special issue emerged from the guest editors’ experiences as field researchers in sub-Saharan Africa. During this time both researchers faced the difficult question of “giving back” to the communities in which, and with whom, they worked—communities that were often far less privileged than the researchers were in terms of wealth, mobility, education, and access to health care. Returning from their field sites, both researchers felt a combination of guilt and frustration that they had not done enough or had not done things right. Thus emerged the idea of bringing together a group of researchers, from a range of disciplines, to discuss the topic of giving back in field research. This editorial describes the idea and process that led to the present collection of articles. The guest editors situate the project in the literature on feminist studies and briefly summarize each of the four thematic sections in this special issue. They conclude by emphasizing that their collection is not a guide to giving back. Rather than lay out hard and fast rules about what, how much, and to whom field researchers should give, their collection offers a series of examples and considerations for giving back in fieldwork.

Publication Details

Title
Social Relations of Fieldwork: Giving Back in a Research Setting
Authors
Gupta, Anjali Clare
Publisher
Journal of Research Practice
Publish Date
July 2014
Citation
Gupta, Anjali Clare, Social Relations of Fieldwork: Giving Back in a Research Setting (Journal of Research Practice, July 2014).
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