jo moran-ellis, department of sociology, university of surrey 1

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Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

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Page 1: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey

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Page 2: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

PPIMs projectWhat’s so great about mixed/multi

methods?Arguments againstArguments in favour: the case of

vulnerability

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Page 3: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Methodological aims Making visible the hidden work of

integrating multiple and mixed methods

Substantive aims Richer understanding of vulnerability

through the use of multiple methodologies

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Page 4: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Secondary analysis of existing quantitative data for the relevant neighbourhoods (Geographical/Area level data)

3 sets of Qualitative interviews with individuals: Whole Households: all household members Solo living respondents Homeless people

Visual methods: photographs and video data with individuals

Range of respondents derived from individual interviews

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Page 5: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

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Page 6: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Combinations of methods that could be chosen

The epistemological and ontological implications of what is chosen

The practicalities of carrying out the research

How the data are going to be brought together (lack of theory?)

Tensions between approaches and methods

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Page 7: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Multiple Method Research Designs (MMRD)▪ Multi-method designs -1+ method within paradigms▪ Mixed methods designs -1+ method mixed

paradigms▪ Combining methods – 1+ method, one subsumed to

other?▪ Integrating methods – 1+ method of equal weight?▪ Triangulation – outcome of MMRD?* ▪ Data transformation ▪ Quantitized data▪ Qualitized data

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Page 8: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Emic and etic understandings?

Multiple research questions?

Multiple facets or contexts

Multiple of singular reality?

Mixed phenomena?

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Page 9: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Sequential or parallel? Linked or independent? Respondent enrolment Development of research instruments Time required Costs – value for money? Necessary expertise? Team organisation and communication

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Page 10: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Where’s your theory? How does that help?

Assumptions and presumptions – negotiating a path through/round them

Integration; triangulation; combination? When are you going to integrate? Have

you missed the moment? Will your audience understand?

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Page 11: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Methodological▪ Differing findings▪ Unit of analysis

Political▪ Preference/requirements of ‘audiences’

Practical▪ Time▪ Money▪ Age of data

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Page 12: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

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Page 13: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Multi-faceted nature of all phenomena

ContextualityMicro-meso-macro

dimensions/relationshipsAgency and structure

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Page 14: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Essentialist approachesConstructionist approachesFixed state/statusContextual and fluidAn inherent weakness or something

managed and negotiated?

Children and vulnerability14

Page 15: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Which one and why that?

Insufficient for some purposes eg Policy development

Cannot elaborate micro-meso-macro interfaces and relationships

Structure and agency

Some presumptions are problematic

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Page 16: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Multi-dimensional phenomenon Access via different methods derived from

an interpretivist stance Can explore contingency and dynamic

aspects

Draw on emic and etic conceptualisations to plan a strong design for mixed methods

Can explore structural relationships and agency/structure interfaces

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Page 17: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Census data National data sets (eg GHS) National statistical returns (eg Crime statistics for

HO) Published research findings Local surveys (primary data) Local statistics (secondary/primary data) Limited data about children

Research Questions Specific (hypotheses) Determined at start by outside ‘experts’/prior

research Limited by what is available eg area; analysis unit

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Page 18: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

The example of children and non-domestic violence

Area level: ‘risky’ areas?▪ Deprived areas (IMD measurements): are

high crime rates against children associated with neighbourhood levels of deprivation?

Individual level: vulnerable people?▪ Are children more or less vulnerable to non-

domestic violence than other age groups?▪ How does this vary by (eg) age, ethnicity,

gender, imputed social class, household income?

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Page 19: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

What does ‘vulnerability’ mean in children’s everyday lives? Vulnerability unspecified by researcher; aim to

understand how respondents define it; subjectivity and context of great importance.

How is ‘vulnerability experienced and managed by children in different arenas of their lives? An individual level experience: eg feeling safe. A cultural/community level understanding: eg

what ‘being vulnerable’ means to children living in this area

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Page 20: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Children are often seen as inherently vulnerable

Particularly the case in policy terms

Indirect challenge from sociology of childhood Agency ; social actors But ambivalence about children as

vulnerable members of society

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Page 21: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Uneven distribution of economic, social and political power in society leads to certain groups of people being at greater risk of adverse events such as ill-health, trauma or material loss.

But connecting vulnerability to a characteristic such as age or social status does not tell us about the experiential nature of feeling vulnerable or being seen as vulnerable.

Designating specific groups of people ‘vulnerable’ glosses how people experience and manage vulnerabilities in everyday life.

Need to “create ways of analysing the vulnerability implicit in daily life”, and the coping strategies that people develop to manage these (Wisner 1991:128) and connect that with structural dimensions.

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Page 22: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Interested in the different ways in which children might construct, explain and experience vulnerability

Theoretical integration with macro level understandings of children as vulnerable

Children aged between 10 and 18, living at home with at least one parent

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Page 23: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

No predetermined definition of vulnerability

Interviews to explore how they conceptualised vulnerability and how they responded to it

Photo-elicitation and video-journey interviews in addition

Focus here on integrated findings for non-domestic safety and vulnerability

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Page 24: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Others’ constructions: all were aware of the ways in which adults thought children were vulnerable although they were not always sure as to why

Sometimes accorded with their own experiences and constructions, sometimes not

Spent time managing other people’s worries whilst also managing the situations in which they felt they were vulnerable

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Page 25: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

I: are there any […] rules that your parents set [about using the internet]P: not really but they don’t let us have hotmail because of the chat room, my sister had it but I don’t know what she did but then they banned it … so I don’t get the benefit which I think is really unfair as all my friends have it and I’m the only one who doesn’t have itI: do you understand the reasons why you can’t have it?P: not really, I asked but they wouldn’t tell me

(Tom, age 13 years)

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Page 26: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

The threat that strangers (could) pose when no adult present to protect them (eg in the town)

P: If I like see someone who doesn’t, if it’s late or something and I find, if I see someone who doesn’t look like normal than I just walk off with my mates and go somewhere else.I: […]what kind of things do you look for when you’re trying to decide if someone’s OK or a bit..?P: It’s just like if he doesn’t look right, they’re watching and things. (Stuart, age 12 years)

I: What is it about strangers that you worry about?P: Kidnapped (Jack, 13 years old).

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Page 27: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

parental fears about how places became more unsafe at night or outside the bounds of daytime were understood as being simply about ‘the dark’:

I: What about when you are outside playing? Are there rules about where you can go or what time? P: Sometimes I am not allowed to go to the park I have to stay right in front [garden]. And we are not allowed to come home really late.I: What is late, what would be late?P: Well, when it gets dark. When it gets dark.

(Yasmin, 11 years old).

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Page 28: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Respondents 14yrs and older differentiated parental worries about vulnerability from the ‘real’ vulnerabilities to be dealt with Threats of violence: in some places other

young people were looking to fight, were in gangs, or there was a strong chance of general violence occurring (visual and video data).

Important to know when to leave a place and who to avoid (video data)

Important your parents did not know28

Page 29: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

False information about whereabouts

I go to my friend’s house and we’ll go out, and I’ll just text my parents and say we’ve gone here, there or wherever. If I’m staying at a friend’s house, I will go out with them but won’t tell my parents (Lucy, 14 years old).

Withholding information about own vulnerabilities Managing gendered threats to self

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Page 30: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

“this is where my mum dropped me off outside [the station] and there was a man on his phone there…I felt uneasy because...as I got out of the car he hung up and looked at me and I was just about to walk down [the underpass] and he turned as if he was going to walk down to…so I went down there [another way]… I felt much better doing that where I knew there were a lot of people around rather than having rather than I don’t know whether he was following me you as a teenage girl you feel uneasy about these things”

(Rachel, aged 13, video data)30

Page 31: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

“Usually I would say that there’s not many people my age that I could be frightened of, because they’re my age therefore I know how they think, and even if they’re acting hard and they’re going hard and they’re going to beat you up, you they’re not because ..[they just] want to scare people” (jane, 13)

“If I see a man on his own I get scared if they’re big, especially if they start looking at you, and sometimes there are men that will look at you and not take their eyes off you and you start to feel uneasy and think ‘what are they looking at?’

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Page 32: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Vulnerability emerges as contextual to the social worlds of the participants

Reflects the ways in which children/young people are positioned between structures which constrain their actions on the basis of their age, and their own desires, opportunities, and abilities to be (relatively) autonomous social actors

Vulnerability is a site around which the relationship between their structural position in their families, and in society more generally, and their status as social actors is played out

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Page 33: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Using a mixed methods approach Interface between micro and macro

dimensions of physical safety, distributions of risk, violence

Would need primary data to capture distributions of management strategies

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Page 34: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Vulnerability is experienced in many domains, at many levels

Single methods approaches are limited in the understandings they can produce

Need to be specific about which methods, why, how, when.

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Page 35: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Ideal resolution: Careful prior design and planning! Integration or other relationships?

Tendency to a particular kind of multi methods design in some contexts Often driven by etic ‘mode’ of

intervention/government

Often leads to resolution through: Etic measures of the emic Loss of depth?

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Page 36: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

Which combines methods/data/analyses in such a way that they form a whole but

retain their paradigmatic nature (ie they are not translated one into the other) and

make a contribution of equal value

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Page 37: Jo Moran-Ellis, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey 1

▪ From the start

▪ During data generation/fieldwork

▪ Through data analysis

▪ Via interpretation

▪ As a product of presentation

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