In Pursuit of Ethical and Inclusive Research: What Ethics Committees and Disability Researchers Can Learn From Each Other

Author:

Walsh Megan12ORCID,Stead Victoria3,Sawyer Susan M.245,O’Shea Amie16,Watson Joanne M.167,Anderson Kate L. M.1289

Affiliation:

1. School of Health and Social Development, Faculty of Health Deakin University, Australia

2. Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, Australia

3. School of Humanities and Social Sciences Deakin University, Australia

4. Centre for Adolescent Health, The Royal Children’s Hospital Melbourne, Australia

5. Department of Paediatrics, The University of Melbourne, Australia

6. Institute for Health Transformation, Faculty of Health Deakin University, Australia

7. Manipal University, India

8. School of Computing Technologies, RMIT University STEM College, Australia

9. Centre for Research in Assessment and Digital Learning, Deakin University, Australia

Abstract

Across disciplines, qualitative researchers have documented epistemological and practical tensions in the ethical review of community-based and participatory research, with many arguing that ethics committees’ decisions perpetuate the exclusion of marginalised communities from research engagement. In the existing literature, the research team and the ethics committee are often characterised as staunch opponents. Conversely, in our recent qualitative research addressing communication about sexuality with young people with cerebral palsy who use communication methods other than speech (augmentative and alternative communication), we found that constructive collaboration between researchers and committee members yielded novel insights. Co-authored by a multi-disciplinary research team and the former chair of a Human Research Ethics Committee, this reflexive case study identified three key tensions which arose in the ethical review of research involving this purportedly marginalised population, which reflected the wider importance of trust. We propose a series of practical recommendations to support productive collaboration in the pursuit of safe, inclusive and community-driven research.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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