Population, Space and Place
Volume 17, Issue 4, 2011, Pages 326-337

More than methods: Learning from research with children seeking asylum in Ireland (Article)

White A.* , Bushin N.
  • a Geography Department, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
  • b Geography Department, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland

Abstract

In this paper we explore the ways in which the methodological and analytical complexities that are encountered when researching with children have stimulated particular approaches that are useful to consider in the context of research with both adults and children who are refugees or seeking asylum. We draw upon ideas related to performativity to argue that the methods and activities we employ in research encounters 'in-the-field' play a key role in facilitating research participants' efforts to express their subjectivities and identities. Drawing on fieldwork with children in an accommodation centre for asylum-seeking families in Ireland, we argue that using child-centred research methods can be understood as specific moments within which materials become available for research participants (children) to develop and enhance their social and cultural identities in many different ways. The use of multiple and participatory methods that children engaged with, adapted or ignored (as they chose), enabled and resulted in children representing themselves as individuals in families seeking asylum, rather than as 'asylum-seeker children'. This paper supports work that suggests that ways of approaching participatory research with children may be useful when researching other populations, but it goes beyond this point to assert that research encounters may provide participants with exceptional resources for explaining their lives. © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Author Keywords

Asylum Children Trust Refugees Methods

Index Keywords

participatory approach research social development refugee fieldwork asylum seeker Ireland cultural identity

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79959387850&doi=10.1002%2fpsp.602&partnerID=40&md5=7772a6d987270f0f8d648429598acb78

DOI: 10.1002/psp.602
ISSN: 15448444
Cited by: 16
Original Language: English