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Children's Geographies

Volume 5, Issue 3, 2007

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‘Tell Me Your Story’: Applied Ethics in Narrative Research with Young Fathers
Original Articles

‘Tell Me Your Story’: Applied Ethics in Narrative Research with Young Fathers

DOI:
10.1080/14733280701445838
Jane Reevesa

pages 253-265

Abstract

There has been a significant increase of interest in parents who are considered to be outside of normative discourses; specifically the ‘moral panic’ relating to an increase in the demography of teenage mothers in the UK (SEU, 1999, 2003; Swann et al., 2003). Recently research has turned to the experiences of parenting from the father's perspective (Daniel and Taylor, 1999, 2001) although there remains a significant gap focusing on the experiences of young fathers. It is argued by Swann et al. (2003) that young fathers are a difficult group to access and this has limited the amount and type of studies conducted with many studies on young parents looking at the role of the father through the eyes of the mother. This contribution focuses on the use of narrative interviews with a small group of young, vulnerable, socially excluded fathers who are users of the statutory social services in the UK. The article looks specifically at the ethics and practical challenges of working with this group and offers insights into the use of the narrative method and the ethical dilemmas resulting from it.

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Details

  • Published online: 10 Sep 2007

Author affiliations

  • a Department of Family Care and Mental Health , School of Health and Social Care, University of Greenwich , Avery Hill Road, Eltham, London, SE9 2UG E-mail:

Journal news

  • 2014 Impact Factor: 1.279; 5-Year Impact Factor: 1.411

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