Situating Ethics in Online Mourning Research : A Scoping Review of Empirical Studies

Myles, David; Cherba, Maria et Millerand, Florence (2019). « Situating Ethics in Online Mourning Research : A Scoping Review of Empirical Studies ». Qualitative Inquiry.

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Résumé

In the past decade, social media have put mourning practices at the forefront of daily life in ways that challenge assumptions made about the public disclosure of information often construed as being highly intimate. This article examines how researchers conceive online mourning in empirical studies and how such conceptions inform (or not) methodological and ethical decisions. Through a scoping review, we identified 40 empirical papers addressing online mourning. Our analysis shows that, while online mourning practices have overwhelmingly been problematized in terms of privacy and publicness within the current literature, ethical issues relating to their analysis have been scarcely addressed in empirical research. In line with Foucault’s work on the dispositif, we then examine the performative role of privacy and data sensitivity in the context of online mourning research (notably in relation to consent procurement) and discuss our findings in light of emerging trends in context-based ethics.

Type: Article de revue scientifique
Mots-clés ou Sujets: DEUIL, ÉTHIQUE, ÉTHIQUE DE LA RECHERCHE EN LIGNE
Unité d'appartenance: Centres institutionnels > Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur la science et la technologie (CIRST)
Faculté de communication > Département de communication sociale et publique
Déposé par: Florence Millerand
Date de dépôt: 26 avr. 2021 09:10
Dernière modification: 26 avr. 2021 09:10
Adresse URL : http://archipel.uqam.ca/id/eprint/14210

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