Institutional Review, IRB, and Ethics Codes

 

Bhattacharya, S. (2014). “Institutional Review Board and International Field Research in Conflict Zones.” PS: Political Science & Politics 47(4): 840–844. [Link

Bloemraad, I., & Menjívar, C. (2021). “Precarious Times, Professional Tensions: The Ethics of Migration Research and the Drive for Scientific Accountability.” International Migration Review. [Link]

Bosk, C., & de Vries, R. (2004). “Bureaucracies of Mass Deception: Institutional Review Boards and the Ethics of Ethnographic Research.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 595(1), 249–263. [Link]  

Callaway, E. (2017) “South Africa’s San People Issue Ethics Code to Scientists.” Nature News 543(7646): 475. [Link

Clark-Kazak, C. (2019). “Developing Ethical Guidelines for Research.” Forced Migration Review 61, 12–14. [PDF

Goyes, Paulette, Jessica Grant, Patricia Kaishian, Tobias Policha, Daniel C. Thomas, & Roo Vandegrift (2021). “Code of Conduct for Inter-Institutional Field Work.” (Version v1.0.1). [Link

Hemming, J. (2009). “Exceeding Scholarly Responsibility: IRBs and Political Constraints.” In C. Sriram et al. (Eds.), Surviving Field Research: Working in Violent and Difficult Situations (pp. 21-37). London & New York: Routledge. [Link

Houston Institute for Race and Justice. (2021). “Fool’s Gold: How RCT Research Harms Communities Impacted by Criminal Punishment.” Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice. January 26. [Link]  

Clark-Kazak, C. (2019). “Developing Ethical Guidelines for Research.” Forced Migration Review, 61, 12–14. [PDF]  

Goyes, Paulette, Jessica Grant, Patricia Kaishian, Tobias Policha, Daniel C. Thomas, & Roo Vandegrift (2021). “Code of Conduct for Inter-Institutional Field Work.” (Version v1.0.1). [Link]  

Hemming, J. (2009). “Exceeding Scholarly Responsibility: IRBs and Political Constraints.” In C. Sriram et al. (Eds.), Surviving Field Research: Working in Violent and Difficult Situations (pp. 21-37). London & New York: Routledge. [Link]  

Houston Institute for Race and Justice. (2021). “Fool’s Gold: How RCT Research Harms Communities Impacted by Criminal Punishment.” Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice. January 26. [Link

Makhoul, J., El-Alti, L., Qutteina, Y., Nasrallah, C., Sakr, C., Nakkash, R., & Alali, K. (2014). “‘Protecting’ or ‘Policing’: Academic Researchers’ View of IRBs in an Arab Context.” Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, 9(5), 25–35. [Link]

Makhoul, J., & Nakkash, R. (2017). “Challenges to Research Ethics Regulations: Academic Researchers’ Voices in the Arab World.” In H. Silverman (Ed.), Research Ethics in the Arab Region (pp. 281–290). Springer International Publishing. [Link]

Michelson, M. R. (2016). “The Risk of Over-Reliance on the Institutional Review Board: An Approved Project Is Not Always an Ethical Project.” PS: Political Science & Politics,49(2), 299–303. [Link]  

Nakkash, R., Qutteina, Y., Nasrallah, C., Wright, K., El-Alti, L., Makhoul, J., & Al-Ali, K. (2017). “The Practice of Research Ethics in Lebanon and Qatar: Perspectives of Researchers on Informed Consent.” Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, 12(5), 352–362. [Link]

Nordling, L. (2017). “San People of Africa Draft Code of Ethics for Researchers.” Science (blog), March 17. [Link

Office for Human Research Protections. 2018. “International Compilation of Human Research Standards: 2018 Edition.” U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. [PDF

Yanow, D., & Schwartz-Shea, P. (2008). “Reforming Institutional Review Board Policy: Issues in Implementation and Field Research.” PS: Political Science & Politics,41(3), 483–494. [Link]