Analysing Qualitative Research: learning from the field Assoc. Professor Anni Dugdale RIM, Bhutan...

Preview:

Citation preview

Analysing Qualitative Research:learning from the field

Assoc. Professor Anni Dugdale

RIM, Bhutan 2013

Where am I?

You’re 30 metres

above the ground in a

balloon

You must be a

researcher

Yes. How

did you know?

Because what you told me is

absolutely correct but completely

useless

You must be a policy

maker

Yes, how did

you know? Because you

don’t know where you are, you

don’t know where you’re going, and

now you’re blaming me

Drawing a lesson

• We are practitioners who want to do and analyse research to draw lessons and influence practice. Our research is action-based research.

• Action-based research is a distinctive way of learning.

• It draws on research evidence to propose a

remedial course of action to deal with a problem confronting policymakers in their home environment.

What is ‘action-based’ research?

• Action-based research has ‘explanatory’, ‘descriptive’ and ‘prescriptive’ objectives.

• Action-based research includes practitioners in the production of the research.

• Ideally action-based research includes practitioners in the analysis of the research.

• Action research is pragmatic – it aims to produce research which can be integrated into decision processes.

• Action research involves designing a process of learning

Basic Principles

• Speaking truth to power

• A clear and accessible objective/project

• Use well grounded theory

• Credible evidence

• Critical reflexivity – building a preponderance of evidence

• A participatory learning process

Example of Action-based Research & Analysis

APGEST (Asia Pacific Gender Equity through Science & Technology)

AIMSa) to work with the UNESCO basic science program in

11 countries to raise awareness of gender in science and technology;

b) to advocate and promote gender equity in and through science and technology;

c) to diagnose problems, incubate ideas and inspire better practices.

7

APGEST: (ASIA PACIFIC GENDER APGEST: (ASIA PACIFIC GENDER EQUITY IN SCIENCE & EQUITY IN SCIENCE &

TECHNOLOGY) PROGRAMMETECHNOLOGY) PROGRAMME

Collaboration of• APGEN – Asia Pacific Gender Equality

Network• UNDP • UNESCO

8

Poverty and exclusion is getting worse not better Poverty is feminised. Globalization is linked to poverty: benefits are to

those most ‘connected’ Women are triply disadvantaged:

(1) unequal access to science, technology and participation in the knowledge dynamics of globalisation. (2) Unequal access to technical skill for women, including technologies of connectedness.(3) S&T development oriented away from relevance to women.

Women hold up half the sky women hold half the local science & technology knowledge communities need to survive & thrive. Women maintain food security, health, household energy supply & water & sanitation management.

APGEST - ASIA PACIFIC GENDER EQUITY IN APGEST - ASIA PACIFIC GENDER EQUITY IN SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMME: SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMME: Puzzle StatementPuzzle Statement

9

Aim:Explore what special steps can be taken combining social &

technical innovation to connect poor women to global techno-cultural worlds

Primary Programme Goal for APGEST:

development of women’s technical skill, capital and capacity in social technical innovation particularly at village level

10

Action Research because focus was on

- Learning from practice and best practice

- Learning how to create & encourage gender sensitive policy in technical Ministries (eg water, forest & fisheries, agriculture, energy)

Research Design

• Qualitative research strategy– Policy document analysis– Interviews with key policy makers– Case studies of best practice

• Analysis of published reports & media coverage• Semi-structured interviews with implementing

agencies• Site visits – ethnographic observation and open

ended informal interviews with key informants

12

Participating CountriesParticipating Countries

13

Renewable EnergyRenewable Energy

WaterWater

Green Green HealthHealth

BiotechnologyBiotechnology

Information Technology

Technology Focus

For lots more seehttp://www.unesco.or.id/apgest/

14

Information & Communication technologies

social and technical innovation to connect the poor to the global economy

(M.S. Swaminatham Research Institute microwave intranet Pondicherry India)

APGEST (GENDER EQUITY IN SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY)

PROGRAM

15

• Theme 1: how technology works as a socio-technical system– Villianpur is the town hub. It links

to internet & Tamil speaking volunteers keep information on the intranet up to date. Microwaves are used to link to Village Knowledge Centres – cheaper than telephone lines which are not existent in area

– Integrate information into existing communication networks at village level

Ethnography of design of Village Knowledge Centres & intranet

Theme 2 - Politics of space: Placement of computer matters

• Here picture shows Knowledge Centre was adjacent to temple, this did not work as traditionally Dalits could not enter temples

• Head villager’s house was tried – it was weatherproof - but family members were favoured & poor excluded

Pictures from paper by Subbiah Arunachalam*M S Swaminathan Research FoundationChennai, India http://www.ifla.org/IV/ifla68/papers/074-095e.pdf

Analysis focused on themes of how to organise human-technology interaction to ensure gender equity

17

•Theme 3 – (Disaggregated) Meaning villagers give to ICT

–What information do people – men, women, youth - want?

Children want to play gamesYouth want to practice for national exams compete for university entry

Women developed a plants for health database to share knowledge of traditional medicine

Fisherman want to know latest weather reports

18

• Making gravity feed small-scale reservoir systems in Nepal Gender equity themes– Women in design– Women participating in public

decision forums– Less drudgery, women able to

develop small-scale enterprises

19

• Green health– Partnership between Women’s

Studies Centre at Yogyakarta State University women traditional jamu makers

• Protecting traditional health knowledge from erosion, extinction & bio-piracy

• Microcredit, modernising production & distribution

Recommended