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Ethical discriminations? Representing the reprehensible

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journal contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Edward Wray-Bliss
This paper reflects upon the ‘goodness’ or ‘ethics’ of Critical Management/ Critical Organisation Studies (COS) research practices. I argue that academic representations of others entail an ethical responsibility to the researched, a responsibility that COS is, as yet, insufficiently exploring. Reflecting upon my own research with those who have colluded in discrimination and Stanley and Wise’s (1979) research on obscene telephone callers, I explore the nature and limits of responsibility when researching those who have acted reprehensibly. I end by arguing that COS “owe(s) some responsibility to ‘the researched’ of all kinds, whether we morally approve of them or not” (Stanley and Wise 1993:177).

History

Journal

Tamara

Volume

2

Pagination

7 - 22

Location

Las Cruces, N. M.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1532-5555

eISSN

1545-6420

Language

eng

Notes

Copyright (2004) by the TAMARA Website, http://TamaraJournal.com reproduced with permission from the publisher.

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2003, TamaraLand Publishers

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