Angela Okune Annotations

BIO: How have qualitative data processes impacted people in this setting (subjecting them to over-research or invisibility?)

Wednesday, January 15, 2020 - 2:00pm

AO: This excerpt from the report corroborates other stories about research participants feeling used and exploited by research and appears to be more acutely felt in places where multiple research projects take place by different groups in the same geographic and topical area and yet no changes are observed or experienced by residents. The sentiments documented in this report also were expressed in this focus group discussion.

Page 6 - 7: "...if the same people are interviewed over and over again, while not seeing any benefits of their research participation, people stop seeing the use of research altogether. The same academic told us a similar experience: ‘so someone will tell you, ‘you are the 50th person interviewing me, what are you going to do differently?’ [...] So it’s like they’re being used and they are not getting anything out of it’ (Interview 4 June 2019). This eventually leads to a sensation of research fatigue among participants, which tends to appear after long-term or repeated participation in research projects, especially where there are no perceived changes as a result or when changed cannot easily be linked back to the participation in the research (Clark 2008; Mwambari 2019). Eventually research participants might even end up feeling disempowered and instrumentalised by researchers, therefore producing the opposite effect of the social change that is aimed for. An independent researcher we interviewed expressed the effect of this research fatigue, which impacts the participants, but eventually also the capacity for researchers to undertake research:

Right now in the slums when you just say the word research no-one listens to you, she told me... People are tired because they get asked questions but they don’t get any feedback. [...] One of the people asked me why didn’t you sit with us and even develop this research with us and even ask us is sexual violence the issue? (Interview 13 June 2019)."

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