Ethics in Social Science Research: Becoming Culturally Responsive provides a thorough grounding in research ethics, along with examples of real-world ethical dilemmas in working with vulnerable populations. Author Maria K. E. Lahman aims to help qualitative research students design ethically and culturally responsive research with communities that may be very different from their own. Throughout, compelling first person accounts of ethics in human research–both historical and contemporary–are highlighted and each chapter includes vignettes written by the author and her collaborators about real qualitative research projects.

Ethical Research With People Who Are Homeless : “My Mind’s Not Homeless”

Ethical Research With People Who Are Homeless : “My Mind’s Not Homeless”

Jeffery D. Roche Tyler Kincaid Maria K. E. Lahman Suzanne V. Landram Veronica M. Richard Trent L. Lalonde

We think sometimes that poverty is only being hungry, naked, and homeless. The poverty of being unwanted, unloved, and uncared for is the greatest poverty.

—Mother Teresa

Bag lady, beggar, bum, derelict, dirty wretch, drifter, gutter punk, hobo, panhandler, street dweller, street person, tramp, vagabond, vagrant, wino.

Who has not heard these words, seen them depicted in the media, or perhaps used these terms, even lightly (picture yawning and stretching and saying without thinking, “Wow, I feel like a ...

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