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A Practitioner's Guide to the Ethical Conduct of Research on Child Marriage in Humanitarian Settings.
Robinson W. Courtland.
Hunersen, Kara.
Leigh, J.
Elnakib, Shatha.
Metzler, Janna.
United Nations Population Fund.
UNICEF.
Women's Refugee Commission.
Johns Hopkins University.
International Resource
Technical Report
i, 68 p.
Copyright
Published: January 2021
Women's Refugee Commission
15 West 37th Street, 9th Floor
New York, NY 10018
Tel: 212-551-3115
Fax: 212-551-3180
info@wrcommission.org
Available From:http://womensrefugeecommission.org/
View: https://www.womensrefugeecommission.org/research-resources/practitioners-guide-ethical-conduct-of-research-on-child-marriage-in-humanitarian-settings/
This guide is intended to offer practitioners a framework for decision-making considering whether and how to conduct research on child marriage in humanitarian settings. Our focus is on the ethical conduct of research among female and male adolescents and young people(10–24) who are at risk of or have experienced child marriage and are living in challenging, low-resource and often insecure environments. This guide is designed to help practitioners make decisions about whether or not human subject research on child marriage is needed in humanitarian settings, and, if it is needed, to help them examine the key concepts, elements and options that should be consideredin conducting ethical research. (Author abstract modified)
Keywords:
MARRIAGE; FAMILY VIOLENCE; SPOUSE ABUSE; CHILD ABUSE; DISASTER RESPONSE; CONFLICTS; SOCIAL PROBLEMS; ETHIOPIA; REFUGEES; CHILD WELFARE WORKERS; SOCIAL WORKERS; SOCIAL WORKERS ROLE