Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research
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Product details
- ISBN 9781538191231
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 06 Aug 2026
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
Who can and should conduct ethnographic research? How can we transform an idea into a research question, and how can that question, in turn, be developed into a research design that produces comprehensible data?
Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research, Third Edition, is a comprehensive introduction to ethnographic methods. It opens by defining ethnography and considering ethical challenges in the field before exploring major theories and ways of thinking in ethnographic research. The book then offers a general overview of qualitative and quantitative research, including the many different approaches to designing studies, and dives into developing a good research question. A discussion of data collection and analysis are then followed by an exploration of how ethnography is used to solve critical social, health, education, and cultural issues as well as emerging trends in ethnography.
Designing and Conducting Ethnographic Research is the first book in The Ethnographer’s Toolkit, a series of texts on how to plan, design, carry out, and use the results of applied ethnographic research.
New to This Edition:
--A new discussion of the decolonization of research and changes in researcher stance sheds light on alternative ethnographic interventions and raises questions of what ethnography could and should be
--New Chapter 10, “Emerging Trends in Ethnography,” covers burgeoning uses of artificial intelligence and other digital technologies as well as Indigenous and art-based research approaches and methods
--A new discussion of what research questions are, how they are formulated at different levels, and how they guide data collection enables beginner researchers to create stronger studies
--An exploration of new ethical challenges in the field, including in digital and online research, offers early ethnographers the knowledge and tools to address new and emerging ethical concerns
Jean J. Schensul is adjunct professor of public health and research scientist of anthropology at UCONN and former director of the Institute for Community Research. She plays a national role in promoting community-initiated research partnerships with universities, building community research capacity and mentoring diverse young scholars to conduct community based participatory research.
Margaret D. LeCompte is professor emerita of education and sociology at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She is internationally known as one of the leading proponents of qualitative and ethnographic research and evaluation in education.
