Exploring practical and ethical dilemmas when conducting research with small population groups in First Nations communities: Privileging stories as data, and data as stories

Corinne Reid , Roz Walker , Kim Usher , Debra Jackson , Carrington Shepherd , Rhonda Marriott Nyikina Nation, Australia
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Abstract

Purpose

When working with small population groups, answering consequential research questions to rigorous scientific standards can be challenging due to limited sample sizes impacting statistical power. Creating translational solutions can be additionally challenging when cultural and language differences exist. Therefore, researchers must learn to walk in two worlds. This paper explores practical and ethical dilemmas encountered when conducting research with small population groups in First Nations communities, and the opportunities afforded by privileging stories as data, and data as stories.

Methods

This study drew on experiences of co-researching with small groups of First Nations young people and Elders in diverse communities, to elucidate the importance of co-designing context-responsive methodologies and developing shared methodological language to achieve meaningful outcomes. While small samples typically produce less precise and generalisable findings, they can be particularly powerful for the communities involved and produce important findings with the potential to inform policymakers, service providers and practitioners to enhance population outcomes. Shared, iterative, reflective practice identified that conventional methods of research design and data analysis, and highly technical scientific language, were often not fit for purpose; therefore, innovative approaches are needed to progress urgent issues impacting wellbeing.

Main findings

Co-designing innovative methodologies that align with both Indigenous ways of knowing and scientific paradigms is both possible and powerful. Specifically, this study centred knowledge production on curating stories: the gathering of rich individual stories (idiographic design using mixed methods case studies) to generate high-impact knowledge; and systematically drew together a rich tapestry of many stories (idiothetic design using integrative analysis of case studies) to distil locally relevant cumulative wisdom and attain a bridge to more generalisable findings that inform theory development (as a more viable alternative to using nomothetic, large-scale research design). While individual stories were initially privileged as data, the importance of collective (larger scale) data as ‘community stories’ was also found to be useful and accessible in a community context; data must be translatable as meaningful stories to guide action.

Principal conclusions

Drawing on mixed methods provided rich stories capturing both a breadth and depth of understanding of complex issues.
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探讨在原住民社区对小群体进行研究时遇到的实际和伦理困境:将故事视为数据,将数据视为故事
目的在研究小规模人群时,由于样本量有限,影响统计能力,因此按照严格的科学标准回答重大研究问题具有挑战性。当存在文化和语言差异时,制定转化解决方案可能更具挑战性。因此,研究人员必须学会在两个世界中行走。本文探讨了与原住民社区中的小群体开展研究时遇到的实际和伦理困境,以及将故事作为数据和将数据作为故事所带来的机遇。本研究借鉴了与原住民社区中的年轻人和长者小群体共同开展研究的经验,以阐明共同设计因地制宜的方法和发展共同的方法论语言对取得有意义的成果的重要性。虽然小样本通常产生的研究结果不够精确,也不具有普遍性,但它们对所涉及的社区来说可能特别有力,并产生重要的研究结果,有可能为政策制定者、服务提供者和从业人员提供信息,以提高人口的成果。共享、迭代、反思性实践发现,传统的研究设计和数据分析方法以及高度技术性的科学语言往往不符合目的;因此,需要创新方法来解决影响福祉的紧迫问题。具体而言,本研究将知识生产的中心放在了策划故事上:收集丰富的个人故事(采用混合方法案例研究的白痴设计),以产生具有高度影响力的知识;系统地将许多故事汇集在一起(采用案例研究综合分析的白痴设计),以提炼出与当地相关的累积智慧,并为理论发展提供更多可推广的结论(作为采用提名式大规模研究设计的一种更可行的替代方法)。虽然个人故事最初作为数据被优先考虑,但作为 "社区故事 "的集体(更大规模)数据的重要性也被发现在社区背景下是有用和可获取的;数据必须能够转化为有意义的故事,以指导行动。
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