Power, Politics, and Representation

Abaza, M. (2011). “Academic Tourists Sight-Seeing the Arab Spring.” AhramOnline, September 26. [Link]

Al-Faham, H. (2021). “Researching American Muslims: A Case Study of Surveillance and Racialized State Control.” Perspectives on Politics, 1–16. [Link

Al-Hardan, A. (2017). “Researching Palestinian Refugees: Who Sets the Agenda?” Al-Shabaka (blog). April 27. [Link]

Baganda, S. B. (2019). “The ‘Local’ Researcher—Merely a Data Collector? “Oxfam Blogs: From Poverty to Power. August 20, 2019. [Link

Bahati, I. (2019). “Le Robot Producteur Sud: Quel Avenir Dans Les Zones Rouges?” Rift Valley Institute. May 23, 2019. [Link]

Bet-Shlimon, A. (2018). “Preservation or Plunder? The ISIS Files and a History of Heritage Removal in Iraq.” Middle East Research and Information Project (blog), May 8. [Link]

Bisoka, A.N. (2020). “Disturbing the Aesthetics of Power: Why Covid-19 Is Not an “Event” for Fieldwork-based Social Scientists.” Items. [Link]  

Boesten, J., & Henry, M. (2018). “Between Fatigue and Silence: The Challenges of Conducting Research on Sexual Violence in Conflict.” Social Politics, 25(4), 568-588. [Link

Bond, K. D., Lake, M., & Parkinson, S. E. (2020). “Lessons from Conflict Studies on Research during the Coronavirus Pandemic.” Items. [Link

Bouka, Y. (2019). “Considering Power Imbalances in Collaborative Research.” Rift Valley Institute: Essays and Reviews. May 15. [Link]   

Bouka, Y. (2018). “Collaborative Research as Structural Violence.” Political Violence at a Glance. [Link

Brand, L. (2014). “Of Power Relations and Responsibilities.” POMEPS Studies 8: The Ethics of Research in the Middle East. Washington, DC: Project on Middle East Political Science. [Link]

Bunting, A., Kiconco, A., & Quirk, J. (Eds.). (2020). Research as More than Extraction? Knowledge Production and Sexual Violence in Post-conflict African Societies. Beyond Traffic and Slavery/openDemocracy. [PDF

Clark, T. (2008). ‘‘We’re Over-Researched Here!’ Exploring Accounts of Research Fatigue within Qualitative Research Engagements.” Sociology, 42(5), 953-970. [Link]

Cohen, D. K., and Hoover Green, A. 2016. “Were 75 Percent of Liberian Women and Girls Raped? No. So Why is the UN Repeating that Misleading Statistic?” The Washington Post. October 26. [Link]

Cunsolo, A., & Hudson, A. (2018). “Relationships, Resistance & Resurgence in Northern-led Research.” Northern Public Affairs Magazine.  [Link

Denney, L., & Domingo, P. (2015). “Turning the Gaze on Ourselves: Acknowledging the Political Economy of Development Research.” Humanity Journal Blog. [Link

Diab, S., Habjouka, T., & Brown, K. (2019). Tips: Telling Visual Stories. Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma. April 2. [Link

Dzuverovic, N. (2018). ‘Why Local Voices Matter. Participation of Local Researchers in the Liberal Peace Debate.” Peacebuilding, 6(2), 111-126. [Link]  

Forte, Maximilian C. (2011). “The Human Terrain System and Anthropology: A Review of Ongoing Public Debates.” American Anthropologist 113 (1): 149–53. [Link]

Foster, J.E., and Minwalla, S. (2018). “Voices of Yazidi Women: Perceptions of Journalistic Practices in the Reporting on ISIS Sexual Violence.” Women’s Studies International Forum 67 (March 1, 2018): 53–64. [Link]

Henry, M. (2013). “Ten Reasons Not to Write Your Master’s Dissertation on Sexual Violence in War.” The Disorder of Things (blog). June 4, 2013. [Link]

Henry, M., Higate, P., and Sanghera, G. (2009). “Positionality and Power: The Politics of Peacekeeping Research.” International Peacekeeping, 16 (4), 467–482. [Link]

Jenkins, W. (2019). “The Line Between Researcher and Activist.” The Chronicle of Higher Education. November 17. [Link]  

Kalinga, C. (2019). “Caught Between A Rock and a Hard Place: Navigating Global Research Partnerships in the Global South as an Indigenous Researcher.” Journal of African Cultural Studies 31:3, 270-272. [Link

Krystalli (she/her/hers), R. C. (2021). “Narrating Victimhood: Dilemmas and (in)Dignities.” International Feminist Journal of Politics0(0), 1–22. [Link

Lederach, A. J. (2021). “‘Each Word is Powerful’: Writing and the Ethics of Representation.” In R. Mac Ginty, R. Brett, & B. Vogel (Eds.), The Companion to Peace and Conflict Fieldwork (pp. 455–470). Palgrave Macmillan. [Link]

Lewis, C, Banga, A., Cimuka, G., Hategekimana, J., Lake, M., and Pierotti, R. (2019). “Walking the Line: Brokering Humanitarian Identity in Conflict Research.”  Civil Wars 21(2): 200-227. [Link

Lomeli, J. D. R., & Rappaport, J. (2018). “Imagining Latin American Social Science from the Global South: Orlando Fals Borda and Participatory Action Research.” Latin American Research Review, 53(3), 597–612. [Link]

Luft, A. (2020). “Three Stories and Three Questions about Participation in Genocide.” Journal of Perpetrator Research, 3(1). [PDF]

Macías, T. (2016). “Between Violence and Its Representation: Ethics, Archival Research, and the Politics of Knowledge Production in the Telling of Torture Stories.” Intersectionalities: A Global Journal of Social Work Analysis, Research, Polity, and Practice, 5(1), 20–45. [PDF]  

Marshall, S. (2019). “Scholars, Spies and the Gulf Military Industrial Complex.” Middle East Report Online. September 4, 2019. [Link]

Martin, C. (2016). “The ‘Third World’ Is Not Your Classroom.” BRIGHT Magazine, March 7, 2016. [Link]  

Merry, Sarah Engle. (2016). The Seductions of Quantification: Measuring Human Rights, Gender Violence, and Sex Trafficking. University of Chicago Press. [Link]

Mertens, C. (2018). “Undoing Research on Sexual Violence in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.” ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies. [PDF

Minwalla, S., Foster, J. E., & McGrail, S. (2020). “Genocide, Rape, and Careless Disregard: Media Ethics and the Problematic Reporting on Yazidi Survivors of ISIS Captivity.” Feminist Media Studies, 1–17. [PDF]  

Mwambari, D. (2019). “Local Positionality in the Production of Knowledge in Northern Uganda.” International Journal of Qualitative Methods 18 (Online). [Link]

Mwambari, D. (2019). “Africa’s Next Decolonization Battle Should Be about Knowledge.” Al-Jazeera English. September 6. [Link]

Nayel, M.A. (2013). “Palestinian Refugees Are Not at Your Service.” The Electronic Intifada (blog), May 17. [Link

Nyenyezi, A., Ansoms, A., Vlassenroot, K., Mudinga, E., & Muzalia, G. (2020). The Bukavu Series: Toward a Decolonisation of Research. Presses universitaires de Louvain. [Link]

Nyirenda, D., Sariola, S., Gooding, K., Phiri, M., Sambakunsi, R., Moyo, E., Bandawe, C., Squire, B., & Desmond, N. (2018). “We Are the Eyes and Ears of Researchers and Community: Understanding the Role of Community Advisory Groups in Representing Researchers and Communities in Malawi.” Developing World Bioethics, 18(4), 420–428. [Link]

Omata, N. (2019). “‘Over-researched’ and ‘Under-researched’ Refugees.” Forced Migration Review, 61, 15–18. [PDF

Pachirat, T. (2009). “The Political in Political Ethnography: Dispatches from the Kill Floor.” In Political Ethnography: What Immersion Contributes to the Study of Power, edited by Edward Schatz, 143–62. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. 

Pai, M. (2019). “Global Health Research Needs More Than A Makeover.” Forbes. November 10, 2019. [Link]  

Parkinson, S.E. (2019). “Humanitarian Crisis Research as Intervention.” Middle East Report 290 (Spring 2019): 29-37. [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]  

Phiri, M., Gooding, K., Nyirenda, D., Sambakunsi, R., Kumwenda, M. K., & Desmond, N. (2018). “‘Not Just Dogs, but Rabid Dogs’: Tensions and Conflicts amongst Research Volunteers in Malawi.” Global Bioethics, 29(1), 65–80. [Link

Porteous, O. (2020). Research Deserts and Oases: Evidence from 27 Thousand Economics Journal Articles on Africa [Article Manuscript]. [Link]  

Rodríguez, C. O. (2017). “How Academia Uses Poverty, Oppression, and Pain for Intellectual Masturbation.” RaceBaitR. [Link

Ryan, C. (2020). “For Better Research on the Global South We Must Fail Forward.” Africa at LSE (blog). January 31. [Link]   

Secen, S. (2022). “Self-representation of Syrian refugees in the media in Turkey and Germany.” Forced Migration Review, Knowledge, Voice and Power (70), 19–20. [Link]

Slade, N. (2019). Representing Refugees in Advocacy Campaigns. Forced Migration Review61, 47–48. [PDF]  

Singh, N. S., et al. (2021). Research in Forced Displacement: Guidance for a Feminist and Decolonial Approach. The Lancet, 397(10274), 560–562. [Link

Social Science Research Council. “The Minerva Controversy.” [Link

Sukarieh, M., & Tannock, S. (2013). “On the Problem of Over-Researched Communities: The Case of the Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp in Lebanon.” Sociology, 47(3), 1-15. [Link

Sukarieh, M., & Tannock, S. (2019). “Subcontracting Academia: Alienation, Exploitation and Disillusionment in the UK Overseas Syrian Refugee Research Industry.” Antipode 51, no. 2: 664–80. [Link]

Tilley, L. (2017). “Resisting Piratic Method by Doing Research Otherwise.” Sociology, 51(1), 27-42. [PDF

Tuck, E. (2009). “Suspending Damage: A Letter to Communities.” Harvard Educational Review, 79(3). 409-427. [PDF

UNFPA. “Decision Tree: Data Collection on Violence against Women and COVID-19.” UNFPA Asiapacific, July 1, 2020. [Link]

Van Den Berg, S. (2019). “Selling stories of war in Sierra Leone.” OpenDemocracy. August 28, 2019. [Link]