(DOWNLOAD) "Methodological and Ethical Issues in Research on Lesbians and Gay Men (Note ON RESEARCH METHODOLOGY)" by Social Work Research # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Methodological and Ethical Issues in Research on Lesbians and Gay Men (Note ON RESEARCH METHODOLOGY)
- Author : Social Work Research
- Release Date : January 01, 2000
- Genre: Social Science,Books,Nonfiction,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 228 KB
Description
The NASW Public Social Policy Statement on Gay Issues condemned sexual orientation discrimination in 1977, four years after the American Psychiatric Association deleted the diagnostic category of homosexuality from its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Martin, 1997). However, bias against lesbians and gay men continues to affect social work research, literature, and training (Cain, 1996; Mackelprang, Ray, & Hernandez-Peck, 1996; Messinger & Topal, 1997; Morrow, 1996). Not surprisingly, in a recent survey a majority of professional social workers reported receiving little education about lesbians or gay men (Berkman & Zinberg, 1997). Lack of knowledge such as this may contribute to social work practice that is vulnerable to heterosexist bias. One study (Wisniewsky & Toomey, 1987) found negative attitudes toward lesbians and gay men among a third of professional social work participants. A more recent study (Berkman & Zinberg) found such attitudes to be far less common, but it is not clear whether these findings represented a shift in social workers' actual attitudes or an artifact of methodological differences among studies. Research has an important role in educating social workers about lesbians and gay men and their human services needs. However, these issues received little attention in social work research until recently (Mallon, 1997). Studies of lesbians and gay men now constitute an emergent area of research, a trend that is likely to continue in fight of new requirements for inclusion of curriculum on lesbian and gay issues in Council on Social Work Education-accredited social work programs (CSWE, 1994). Because it is an emergent area, some researchers in social work might feel unprepared to enter it. This article aims to help social work researchers prepare for studies involving lesbians and gay men by raising their awareness of methodological and ethical issues in such studies. These issues involve theory and problem formulation, population definition, sampling and generalizability of findings, and preventing harm to study participants.