In order to understand positionality as it relates to research, it is important to learn how to identify and reflect on how knowledge is produced and reproduced. Research across Borders introduces key concepts and methods to understand and critically analyze research in academic books and journals, as well as in media, government reports, and anywhere else information is found. This book addresses the opportunities and challenges of undertaking research in international, cross-border, and cross-cultural contexts.Specifically designed for students studying interdisciplinary or international programs on topics such as human rights, conflict studies, international relations, global development, and migration, Research across Borders provides the methodological, ethical, and epistemological foundations for understanding research across different disciplines. Whether students are gathering information from secondary sources or conducting primary research, Research across Borders aims to help readers become better researchers.
Christina Clark-Kazak is an associate professor of public and international affairs at the University of Ottawa.
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Preparing to Learn and Unlearn1. Why Research across Borders?2. How Is Knowledge Disciplined? The Opportunities and Challenges of Research across Disciplines and Epistemologies3. Ethics, Power, and Positionality4. Designing a Research Project across Borders5. Measurement across Borders6. Case Studies in Global Context7. Sampling, Access, and Representation across Borders8. Interviewing across Borders9. Ethnographic Approaches across Borders: Observation, Participant Observation, Netnography, and "Hanging Out"10. Participatory Research in International, Cross-Cultural Contexts11. Analyzing Text and Images in Cross-Border Research12. Presenting Research Findings across Borders: Reach, Responsibility, and RepresentationGlossaryNotesBibliographyIndex