Three models of transparency in ethnographic research: Naming places, naming people, and sharing data

TitleThree models of transparency in ethnographic research: Naming places, naming people, and sharing data
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsReyes, Victoria
JournalEthnography
Pagination1466138117733754
ISSN1466-1381
Abstract

Ethnographic research consists of multiple methodological approaches, including short- and/or long-term participant observation, interviews, photographs, videos, and group field work, to name a few. Yet, it is commonly practiced as a solitary endeavor and primary data is not often subject to scholarly scrutiny. In this paper, I suggest a model in which to understand the different ways in which ethnographies can be transparent – naming places, naming people, and sharing data – and the varied decisions ethnographers have made with regard to them: whether to name a region, city or specific neighborhood, name primary participants or public officials, and to share interview guides, transcripts, or different kinds of field notes. In doing so, this paper highlights how decisions regarding transparency are part of an ethnographer’s methodological toolkit, and should be made on a case-by-case basis depending on the who, what, where, when and why of our research.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1177/1466138117733754
DOI10.1177/1466138117733754
Short TitleThree models of transparency in ethnographic research