Researchers working in Africa are engaged in ethical methodological logistical emotional and professional compromises. Juggling the demands of being a researcher and being human scholars must balance the recording of data withthe emotional demands of listening of analyzing and reporting personal and often contradictory narratives. This book recognizes these challenges and lays bare the underlying and important process by which the researcher grapples with emotions and how 'feelings' inform and shape data collection interpretation write-up and dissemination. Based on widely researched on-the-ground work the contributors reveal the ambiguities and inconsistences that emerge at all stages of fieldwork and how to tackle them. They examine the ethical quagmires that arise when doing research on sensitive topics in a researcher's own living environment and suggest how to manage the complex interaction between the researcher's own identity and social relationships in the field and navigate the role of researcher when activism risks access to the field.
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