Emotional Introspection: The Politics and Challenges of Contemporary Migration Research
AbstractField-based research increasingly involves working in complex, sometimes insecure, and often emotionally challenging situations. While most researchers are trained in issues pertaining to security, ethics, and responsibility, less preparation goes into the emotional aspects of conducting fieldwork and, upon return, dealing with the retrospective processing of often hard real-life experiences in our analysis and writing. Based on long-term observation and more recent systematic interviews with colleagues who all have worked in emotionally challenging situations, this chapter discusses the particularities of doing migration research in times of stricter migration policy and practice. Special emphasis is put on the institutional cultures and structures surrounding our research, the implications of emotions in the field, and the unequal relationship between the people being studied and the local co-researchers with a view to what can be done prior to, during and after going to the field to maintain both security and emotional engagement, to “do no harm”, and to avoid occupational hazards of burnout, compassion fatigue or secondary traumatic stress among those involved.