Field Research: A Qualitative Research Technique
67 Field Research: When is it Appropriate?
Field research is well equipped to answer “how” kinds of questions. Whereas survey researchers often aim to answer “why” questions, field researchers ask how the processes they study occur, how the people they spend time with in the field interact, and how events unfold. Table 12.1 “Field Research Examples” presents a few examples of the kinds of questions field researchers have asked in past projects along with a brief summary of where and what role those researchers took in the field. The examples presented in Table 12.1 “Field Research Examples” by no means represent an exhaustive list of the variations of questions field researchers have asked or of the range of field research projects that have been conducted over the years, but they do provide a snapshot of the kinds of work sociological field researchers engage in.
Question | Researcher role | Author (year) |
---|---|---|
What are the prospects for cross-cultural, interdisciplinary and methodologically plural approach to well-being | Over 2 years (August to November 2010 & 2012) of interviews in Chiawa, Zambia | White & Jha (2018) |
What are the novel and innovative solutions to critical limitations in existing police research? | Undefined | Birch, Vickers, Kennedy & Galovic (2017) |
What visions of the law do policewomen and popular legal advocates mobilize when they construct their responses to victims? How is evidence constructed in each specific setting? | Between 2012 and 2013 | Lorenzo, R. A., Lins, B. A. (2018) |
How do firefighters perceive their risk as part of the “cancer crisis?” | “Over several months …” | Harrrison, et al. (2017) |
What is the nature of the encounters police have with persons affected by mental illness, and the ways in which such encounters are resolved by policy …? | Eighteen months | Wood, Watson, & Fulambarker (2017) |
Are students engaging in social medial and other non-study behaviours more often than they are studying? | “Several weeks in one semester” at two universities. | Paretta & Catalano (2013) |
NOTE: Many of the above studies had more than one research question. Only one research question per study has been listed for demonstration purposes.
Text Attributions
- This chapter was adapted from Chapter 10.1 in Principles of Sociological Inquiry, which was adapted by the Saylor Academy without attribution to the original authors or publisher, as requested by the licensor. © Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License.