Building on the editors' previous publication, Engaging with Ethics in International Criminological Research, this new book brings together a fresh collection of leading international scholars tackling ethical dilemmas in criminological research. Contributors address how they have experienced and addressed ethical issues in their research, and how they have balanced the benefits and harms of doing such research for both the researcher and the researched.
Ethical Dilemmas in International Criminological Research draws on various issues across a range of jurisdictions and political and social contexts, including cybercrime and transgressive online actions; state and police responses to crime; the war on drugs; working with traumatised participants in criminological research; punishment and prison; and sex, sexualities, and gender. Moreover, this collection aims to offer a truly international perspective, including insights from research projects in the Global South.
This book is essential reading for junior scholars just starting out with original research, as well as more seasoned researchers looking to gain insights into the challenges of criminological research in other cultural contexts. It is also instructive reading for students taking courses in criminological and social research methods.
Michael Adorjan is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Calgary, Canada, and Fellow with the Centre for Criminology, University of Hong Kong.
Rosemary Ricciardelli is Professor in Sociology at Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada.
"Drawing on a range of international scholarship, this book contributes to a wide-ranging and sophisticated discussion on the ethical processes, ethical thinking and decision making that researchers engage in while conducting criminological research. The book is true to its commitment of including a Global South perspective. Each chapter raises thought-provoking ethical issues that go beyond governance processes. The authors provide valuable insights and analyses for researchers looking to expand their understanding of research ethics and being in the field."
Azrini Wahidin, University of Warwick, Programme Lead for the Sociology and Criminology Programme, Chair of the Ethics and Professional Affairs Committee, British Society of Criminology