Designing a Research Project: The Basics of Biomedical Research Methodology

JAMA ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 250 (9) ◽  
pp. 1221
Author(s):  
James R. Marshall
Journeys ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 25-50
Author(s):  
Susan L. Miller

Chapter 2 accomplishes two things. First, it outlines the research methodology conducted in the project, detailing the two groups of women that comprise the sample. Second, it explores the blurred boundaries between images of victims and survivors. Rather than an either/or dichotomy, the women talked about how victimization and survivorship exist on a continuum; the chapter further makes sense of the meanings adopted by the women and examines their implications.


Metascience ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-272
Author(s):  
Jane Azevedo ◽  
John Forge ◽  
Alan MacKay-Sim ◽  
Merry Maisel ◽  
Don Howard

Author(s):  
Júlia Motta

Using ethnography and a research methodology developed for this research project, this article sets out to describe the trajectories of a female refugee and the relationship she has established with her new city of residence. Ruth was born in Angola, but grew up in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. She is 35 years old and has lived in Rio de Janeiro since 2014. She has three children and works as an actress and singer. She reconnects to her roots and reinvents herself in the new territory through spending time with Congolese women in a market in Madureira and in an evangelical church in Brás de Pina. The methodology, using photos, drawings and objects, reveals the experiences of a Black refugee woman in the city where she has come to live. The article intends to reflect on the way these women have reinvented themselves based on the place of the frontier and how they have given different meanings to their identities in their new place.


2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Sandra Jeppesen ◽  
Media Action Research Group

Media activists who are women, queer, trans, Indigenous and/or people of colour are shifting mediascapes through intersectional autonomous journalism practices. This community-based co-research project analyses data from six semi-structured focus group workshops with media activists, who identify a contradictory logic between mainstream and alternative journalism. Two distinct autonomous journalism practices emerge that complement and extend traditional horizontal prefigurative media activist practices through an attentiveness to intersectional identities and interlocking systems of oppression. In rooted direct-action journalism, grassroots autonomous journalists collectively report from a perspective rooted in the concerns of the movement, creating media as a direct-action tactic; whereas in solidarity journalism, autonomous journalists report across movements in solidarity with intersectionally marginalised groups and communities. We argue that, emphasising intersectional mutual aid, relationship building, consent, accountability and content co-creation, these value-based practices have begun to shift dominant media and cultural logics. Finally, we offer critical reflections on some of the challenges inherent in these practices, including a meta-analysis of the intersectional value practices in our activist co-research methodology.


2003 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 331-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chieko Iwashita

Media-induced tourism, which involves visits to places associated with films, television programmes and literature, has become a growing phenomenon yet has been little studied empirically. This paper delineates the empirical study to investigate the phenomenon highlighting the theoretical position and research methodology for this specific research project. This paper, specifically, outlines a social construction theory hat provides an approach that locates tourism in a wider context of society and culture of a generating country and views contemporary tourism as a social and cultural phenomenon.


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