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But where's the body? Bodies, time, money, and the political economy of post-pandemic field research

Since the pandemic, field work has been transformed by shifts in the political economy affecting the material conditions underpinning research. In this research note, a research team considers their challenges and learning in completing field studies conducted in 2022, including intensified strains...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Qualitative research : QR 2024-08
Main Authors: Baines, Donna, Braedley, Susan, Daly, Tamara, Ågotnes, Gudmund, Banerjee, Albert, Chaccour, Elias, Côté-Boucher, Karine, Glasdam, Stinne, Hillier, Sean, MacDonald, Martha, Jacobsen, Frode Fadnes, Stilwell, Christie
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Since the pandemic, field work has been transformed by shifts in the political economy affecting the material conditions underpinning research. In this research note, a research team considers their challenges and learning in completing field studies conducted in 2022, including intensified strains on time, money, researchers’ bodies, and risks associated with illness and infection spread. We argue that a neoliberal “research super-hero” norm operates within the research community, rooted in a conception of high productivity that mingles uneasily, for many researchers, with feminist, anti-racist, and anti-colonial social justice aims and responsibilities. Our 2022 fieldwork experience led us to notice how this norm has circulated within our explicitly feminist research team and nudged us to challenge it, while raising questions about how a “research-worker” norm can best be supported.
ISSN:1468-7941
1741-3109
DOI:10.1177/14687941241264473