Abstract
AbstractThis paper explores ethical considerations and challenges of using the community-based participatory research method of photovoice with marginalized populations. Experiences with conducting photovoice in an urban setting in the Midwestern United States with women refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are described along with reflection on ethical aspects of that experience. Two key related ethical considerations emerge: the roles that empathy, cultural competence, and cultural humility play in working with communities and the tension in research between benefits perceived by individual research participants and greater public health benefits for the groups they represent.
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
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