Title: Research Ethics in the Social Sciences
1Research Ethics in theSocial Sciences
Humanities
- Dean Sharpe, Ph.D.
- Ethics Review Office, University of Toronto
- January, 2007
2Outline
- Research ethics framework
- Assessing risk
- Issues primer
- Preparing a protocol
3History Principles
- Landmarks
- Nuremberg Code (1947)
- Declaration of Helsinki (1964)
- Belmont Report/Common Rule (1979)
- Tri-council Policy Statement (1998)
- Key ideas
- Respect for human dignity, autonomy
- Balance distribution of harms/benefits
4Tri-council Policy Statement (TCPS, 1998) MOU
- Binding guidelines for review of protocols
- Proportionate approach
- Exempt (normal educational testing, program
evaluation) - Delegated/departmental (undergrad)
- Delegated/expedited (minimal riskon par with
daily life) - Full Research Ethics Board (gtminimal risk)
- Continuing (annual renewal, site visits)
- Issues
- Free informed consent
- Privacy confidentiality
- Conflict of Interest
- Inclusion/Exclusion criteria
5Research Ethics at UT
- Ethics Review Office (ERO) Mandate
- Facilitate ethics review
- Maintain institutional compliance
- Educate research community
- Research Ethics Boards (REBs)
- Quorum of 5 (women men) 2--knowledge of
methods, 1--knowledge of ethics, 1--community
member - Social Sciences Humanities, Education, Health
Sciences I II ( HIV/AIDS advisory network)
6Assessing RiskProbability Magnitude of Harm
- Vulnerability of groupas relevant to study
- Physiological/health conditions
- Cognitive/emotional factors (impairment, trauma)
- Socio-economic/legal status
- Research riskfocus on identifiable harm
- Methods invasiveness data sensitivity
- Physiological/health diagnoses, side effects
- Cognitive/emotional stress, anxiety
- Socio-economic/legal duty to report, subpoena,
breach-gtstigma, dismissal, deportation, conviction
7Risk Matrix
- Review Type by Group Vulnerability Research
Risk - Research Risk
- Group vulnerability Low Med High
- Low Exp. Exp. Full
- Med Exp. Full Full
- High Full Full Full
8Review IssuesFree Informed Consent
- Quality of researcher-participant relationship
across all interactions, verbal or written - emphasis on processnot just a signature on a
page - covers recruitment (verbal discussions, phone
calls, letters, e-mail, ads), responses to
questions, de-briefing - Straight-forward explanation, warm invitational
tone - free not to participate, not to answer any
question, to withdraw without consequence - no undue influence (e.g., non-research roles) or
inducement (e.g., financial)
9Review IssuesFree Informed Consent
- Plain language, not legalistic, typically gr.6
level - name, position, contact, any non-research roles
- study title, sponsor, purpose, procedures, time
involvement, risks/benefits, how data will be
used, limits to confidentiality - sign off had study explained, questions
answered, agree to begin, can withdraw - Variations
- verbal if culturally more appropriate phone web
- personal versus alternate, assent (lt 14 years),
dissent ethics approval, admin consent,
community consultation
10Review IssuesPrivacy Confidentiality
- Identity and personal information
- Some projects name participants, attribute
quotes - Most projects protect personal information
- Consider throughout project
- Recruitment (e.g., confidentiality/anonymity,
snowball referrals, phone messages) - Data collection (e.g., focus groups/interviews,
notes/recordings) - Data storage plan separate identifiers from
content double lock password protect,
retention/destruction - Publication pseudonyms, generics, aggregates
11Review IssuesPrivacy Confidentiality
- Possible limits to confidentiality
- Key informants (specialized group, readership)
- Duty to report
- child abuse
- intent to harm self or other
- Subpoena
- may be possible to challenge
12Review IssuesConflict of Interest
- Typically role-based
- e.g., researcher teacher/minister/manager
- real or perceived, must disclose non-research
aspects - may have to managee.g., not recruit directly,
blind to participation - May have to abandon one interest
13Review IssuesInclusion/Exclusion Criteria
- Principle of Justice
- fair distribution of benefits, burdens
- Need to justify basis for including/excluding
- students sometimes have trouble with complex
constructs (e.g., sex/gender/sexual orientation,
race/ethnicity/culture)
14Forms, Deadlines, Guidelineswww.research.utoront
o.ca/ethics/
- Preparing a protocol
- follow models from your research group
- work closely with your supervisor
- check reviewer guide and consent checklist
- each section brief, clear, focus on ethics
- Submission
- Undergrad to your DERC coordinator
- OISE to your departmental coordinator
- Everyone else to ERO, Monday/5pm for expedited,
or check website for monthly REB deadlines
15More Informationwww.research.utoronto.ca/ethics/
- Research Ethics Officer, Social Sciences and
Humanities - dean.sharpe_at_utoronto.ca, 8-5585
- Coordinator, Education REB
- bridgette.murphy_at_utoronto.ca, 6-5606
- Coordinator, Social Sciences and Humanities REB
- marianna.richardson_at_utoronto.ca, 8-3165
- Coordinator, Undergraduate/Delegated Ethics
Review - rhain.louis_at_utoronto.ca, 6-0836
- Information Assistant, Ethics Review Office
- ethics.review_at_utoronto.ca, 6-3273