4.3 Article

Looking at the 'field' through a Zoom lens: Methodological reflections on conducting online research during a global pandemic

Journal

QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 387-402

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1468794120985691

Keywords

Methodology; qualitative research; field research; online methods; pandemic

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The COVID-19 pandemic has caused social science scholars to reconsider their research approaches, with technology playing an increasingly important role in facilitating research activities. While online research methods have their advantages, the question remains whether they can truly replicate the immersive experience of in-person fieldwork.
For many social science scholars, the COVID-19 pandemic has forced us to re-think our approaches to research. As a result of new social distancing measures, those of us who conduct in-person qualitative and ethnographic research have faced significant challenges in accessing the populations and fields we study. Technology served as an incredibly useful tool for social interaction and research prior to the pandemic, and it has since become even more important as a way to engage with others. Although not all types of social research, or even all projects, lend themselves to online activities, digital communication platforms like Zoom, Skype, and Facebook have allowed many of us to continue our studies from a distance-in some cases, significant temporal and spatial distances away from our research sites. As such, it is important to consider how these different methodological approaches challenge our understandings of fieldwork. While the disadvantages of not physically accessing the places we study are clear, can mediated approaches offer (any) hope of the immersion we experienced with in-person fieldwork? If many of us are able to continue ethnographic research (in some form) without co-locating with our participants in our field sites, how are our studies fundamentally affected, as well as the ways we conceptualize the 'field' more largely? This paper explores these methodological and epistemological questions through reflections on conducting online research during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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