Some ethical concerns about counselling research
Authors:
William West a;
Jim Byrne a
| Affiliation: | a School of Education, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK |
DOI:
10.1080/09515070903285668
Publication Frequency:
4 issues per year
Subjects:
Counseling;
Psychiatry & Clinical Psychology - Adult;
Formats available:
HTML
(English)
:
PDF
(English)
View Article:
View Article (PDF)
View Article (HTML)
Abstract
The whole approach of counselling researchers to ethics may be assumed to have been improving in recent years, especially with the BACP research guidelines (Bond, 2004), with its focus on trustworthiness and on the researcher engaging with ethical issues. In this paper we share our concerns about the background to ethical decision making for researchers today followed by our specific concerns for counselling researchers namely: why do counselling research at all?; research that hurts participants; the impact of research on the therapeutic process; restrictive notions around what is data; the politics of funding and informed consent revisited.
|
| Keywords: counselling research; ethical issues |
| view references (36) |

Download Citation


CiteULike
Del.icio.us
BibSonomy
Connotea