ABSTRACT

This volume is a call to qualitative researchers to respond to the political and methodological conservativism of the new millennium. Based upon the plenary papers at the first International Congress on Qualitative Inquiry, 22 scholars from five countries and many academic disciplines address how qualitative inquiry can maintain its forward-looking agenda, its emphasis on ethical practice, and its stance in favor of social justice in a world where conservatives aggressively control the political system, the university, and grant agency purse strings. Contributions by such noted scholars as Patti Lather, Janice Morse, Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Ernest House, Yvonna Lincoln, and H.L. Goodall, Jr. make this an important benchmark work for all involved in qualitative inquiry.

part |145 pages

The Politics of Evidence

part |75 pages

Decolonizing Methodologies

chapter |23 pages

Choosing the Margins

The Role of Research in Indigenous Struggles for Social Justice

chapter |22 pages

Decolonizing Qualitative Research

Nontraditional Reporting Forms in the Academy 1

chapter |9 pages

Humble and Humbling Research

A Modest Witnessing

part |68 pages

Contesting Regulation

chapter |28 pages

Affirming the Will and the Way of the Ancestors

Black Feminist Consciousness and the Search for “Good” [ness] in Qualitative Science

chapter |19 pages

Writing Race into the Twenty-First Century

An Autobiographical Perspective on Hybridity, Difference, and the Postcolonial Experience