Field Logistics, Data Security, and Risk Management

 

Baird, A. (2018). “Dancing with Danger: Ethnographic Safety, Male Bravado and Gang Research in Colombia.” Qualitative Research, 18(3), 342–360. [Link

Carayannis, T., & Bolin, A. (2020). “Research in Insecure Times and Places: Ethics of Social Research for Emerging Ecologies of Insecurity.” Items. [Link]  

Dixit, M. (2013). “Field Research in Conflict Zones: Experience from India and Sierra Leone.” International Studies, 49(1–2), 133–150. [Link]

Electronic Frontier Foundation Resource for Academic Researchers. Surveillance Self-defense. [Link

Ellis, R. (2021). “What Do We Mean By a ‘Hard-to-reach’ Population? Legitimacy Versus Precarity as Barriers to Access.” Sociological Methods & Research. [Link

Ginty, R. M., Brett, R., & Vogel, B. (Eds.). (2021). The Companion to Peace and Conflict Fieldwork. Palgrave Macmillan. [Link]

Goldstein, D.M. (2014). “Qualitative Research in Dangerous Places: Becoming an Ethnographer of Violence and Personal Safety.” Social Science Research Council DSD Working Papers on Research Security, Working Paper Series. [PDF]

Grimm, J.J, Lust, E., Koehler, K., Parkinson, S.E., Schierenbeck, I., and Zayed, D.. (2022). “Back to Field: Uncertainty and Risk in Field Research.” Qualitative and Multi-Method Research, 2022, 21–24. [Link]

Grimm, J. J., Koehler, K., Lust, E. M., Saliba, I., & Schierenbeck, I. (2020). Safer Field Research in the Social Sciences: A Guide to Human and Digital Security in Hostile Environments. SAGE Publications Ltd. [Link]

Hackblossom (Digital Security Resource). “A DIY Guide to Feminist Cybersecurity.” [Link]

Henry, C., Gohdes, A., & Dorff, C. (2022). “Digital Footprints and Data-Security Risks for Political Scientists.” PS: Political Science & Politics, First View (The Profession), 1–5. [Link]

Hilhorst, D.; Hodgson, L.; Jansen, B.; Mena, R. (2016). Security Guidelines for Field Research in Complex, Remote, and Hazardous Places. The Hague: International Institute of Social Studies. English [PDF], French [PDF], Arabic [PDF]  

Kapiszewski, D., MacLean, L.M., and Read, B.  (2015). Field Research in Political Science: Practices and Principles. Cambridge University Press. 

Malejacq, R., & Mukhopadhyay, D. (2016). “The ‘Tribal Politics’ of Field Research: A Reflection on Power and Partiality in 21st-Century Warzones.” Perspectives on Politics, 14(4), 1011-1028. [PDF]  

Mertus, J. A. (2009). “Maintenance of Personal Security: Ethical and Operational Issues.” In C. Sriram et al. (Eds.), Surviving Field Research: Working in Violent and Difficult Situations (pp. 165-176). London & New York: Routledge. [Link

Milliff, A. (2022). “Data security in human subjects research: new tools for qualitative and mixed-methods scholars.” Qualitative and Multi-Method Research, 19/20 (2/1) , 31–39. [Link]

Nilan, P. (2002). “‘Dangerous Fieldwork’ Re-examined: The Question of Researcher Subject Position.” Qualitative Research, 2(3): 363–386. [Link]

Nordstrom, C., & Robben, A. (Eds.). (1995). Fieldwork under Fire: Contemporary Studies of Violence and Survival. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Link

Norman, J. M. (2009). “Got Trust? The Challenge of Gaining Access in Conflict Zones.” In C. Sriram et al. (Eds.), Surviving Field Research: Working in Violent and Difficult Situations (pp. 71-90). London & New York: Routledge. [Link

Palys, T., & Lowman, J. (2012). “Defending Research Confidentiality ‘To the Extent the Law Allows’: Lessons From the Boston College Subpoenas.” Journal of Academic Ethics, 10(4), 271–297. [Link

Parkinson, S. E. (2014). “Practical Ethics: How U.S. Law and the ‘War on Terror’ Affect Research in the Middle East.” POMEPS Studies 8: New Challenges to Public and Policy Engagement. Project on Middle East Political Science: Washington, DC. [Link]

Parkinson, S. E. (2017). “Through the Looking Glass: Information Security and Middle East Research.” POMEPS Studies 24: New Challenges to Public and Policy Engagement. Project on Middle East Political Science: Washington, DC, March 13. [Link

Peter, M., & Strazzari, F. (2017). “Securitization of Research: Fieldwork under New Restrictions in Darfur and Mali.” Third World Quarterly, 38(7), 1531-1550. [Link]  

Richmond, O. P.; Kappler, S., & Björkdahl, A. (2015). “The ‘Field’ in the Age of Intervention: Power, Legitimacy, and Authority Versus the ‘Local’.” Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 44(1), 23-44. [Link

Ross, K. (2015). “‘No Sir, She Was Not a Fool in the Field’: Gendered Risks and Sexual Violence in Immersed Cross-Cultural Fieldwork.” The Professional Geographer, 67(2), 180–186. [PDF]

Romano, David. 2006. “Conducting Research in the Middle East’s Conflict Zones.” PS: Political Science & Politics 39 (03): 439–41. [Link]

Sharp, G., & Kremer, E. (2006). “The Safety Dance: Confronting Harassment, Intimidation, and Violence in the Field.” Sociological Methodology, 36(1), 317–327. [Link]

Sluka, J. A. (2018). “Too Dangerous for Fieldwork? The Challenge of Institutional Risk-Management in Primary Research on Conflict, Violence and ‘Terrorism.’’ Contemporary Social Science 0(0), 1–17. [Link

Sluka, J. A. (2007). “Reflections on Managing Danger in Fieldwork: Dangerous Anthropology in Belfast.” In A. Robben & J. A. Sluka (Eds.), Ethnographic Fieldwork: An Anthropological Reader (pp. 283-296). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. [Link

Styan, David. (2020). “Is Research Getting More Dangerous? Roland Marchal’s Plight Suggests So.” African Arguments (blog), March 17. [Link]   

Thomas, D., et al. (2017). “Ethical Issues in Research Using Datasets of Illicit Origin.” Proceedings of IMC ’17. [PDF

Thomson, S. (2009). “‘That is Not What We Authorised You to Do …’: Access and Government Interference in Highly Politicised Research Environments.” In C. Sriram et al. (Eds.), Surviving Field Research: Working in Violent and Difficult Situations (pp. 108-123). London & New York: Routledge. [Link

Thomson, S. (2010). “Getting Close to Rwandans since the Genocide: Studying Everyday Life in Highly Politicized Research Settings.” African Studies Review 53, (03): 19–34. [Link]

Van Baalen, S. (2018). “‘Google Wants to Know Your Location’: The Ethical Challenges of Fieldwork in the Digital Age.” Research Ethics, 14(2), 1-17. [PDF

Verweijen, J. (2020). “On Assessing Risk Assessments and Situating Security Advice: The Unsettling Quest for ‘Security Expertise’.” In B. B. de Guevara & M. Bøås (Eds.), Doing Fieldwork in Areas of International Intervention: A Guide to Research in Violent and Closed Contexts (pp. 127–142). Bristol University Press. [Link

Wood, E. J. (2009). “Field Research.” In The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics, by Carles Boix and Susan C. Stokes. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. [Link]