Articles

Contextualising the role of the gatekeeper in social science research
Abstract
Accessing research participants within some social institutions for research purposes may involve a simple single administrative event. However, accessing some institutions to conduct research on their data, personnel, clients or service users can be quite complex. Research ethics committee chairpersons frequently field questions from researchers wanting to know when and why gatekeeper permission should be sought. This article examines the role and influence of gatekeepers in formal and organisational settings and explores pragmatic methods to improve understanding and facilitation of this process. Conscientious and well-informed negotiations with gatekeepers are required in order to honour the ethical obligations to conduct appropriate stakeholder engagement before and during research, along with respect for the autonomy of institutions and their employees/clients/service recipients. Provision must be made to identify explicit and implicit gatekeepers to initiate and build collaborative networks that could best support the research process. Careful mutually respectful access agreements which consider the needs and vulnerabilities of both the gatekeeper and the researcher can improve the quality of the scientific data collected. Strategic planning in the research process must take these sometimes complex processes of gatekeeper permission into careful account.
Authors' affiliations
Shenuka Singh, Department of Dentistry, College of Health Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa
Douglas Wassenaar, South African Research Ethics Training Initiative (SARETI). Discipline of Psychology, School of Applied Human Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
Full Text

Keywords
Cite this article
Article History
Date published: 2016-05-25
Article Views
Full text views: 3303
Comments on this article
*Read our policy for posting comments here