International Journal of Social Research Methodology

International Journal of Social Research Methodology

Published by Taylor & Francis

Online ISSN: 1464-5300

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Print ISSN: 1364-5579

Journal websiteAuthor guidelines

Top-read articles

43 reads in the past 30 days

The politics of researching a familiar field: research on youth unemployment in Daveyton township, South Africa

October 2023

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453 Reads

This paper grapples with methodological issues related to ongoing debates on positionality and reflexivity by drawing on the author's experience of conducting research in a culturally familiar field. The paper is based on in-depth qualitative research that examined the lived realities of unemployed young people residing in the township of Daveyton in South Africa's Gauteng Province. This paper aims to transcend conventional perspectives on 'outsider-insider' dynamics as these do not fully explain the complexity of conducting research in a familiar field. The research involved the use of one-on-one interviews and group discussions. I use the term politics of conducting research in a familiar field to explain the texture, language, and daily realities of Daveyton, which are familiar to me given my upbringing in a similar community that I grew up in. To elaborate on this, I formulate three dimensions of the politics of researching a familiar field which are as follows: (1) Ambiguities of the 'element of surprise'; (2) Renegotiating entry; and (3) wider concept of the researcher as 'outsider'. The paper concludes by calling on researchers conducting studies within their own or similar communities to pay specific attention to the nuances of class privilege, exclusion, and power in order to provide meaningful analysis of the existential conditions that participants face.

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Aims and scope


Publishes methodological debates on social research in academic, professional and service settings, and the relationship among them.

  • A key feature of the Journal is its mixed audience of researchers within academic and other research organizations as well as practitioner-researchers in the field.
  • The Journal therefore aims to publish high quality methodological discussions which typically draw on a mix of academic and practice-based research in professional and service settings, and those considering the relationship between the two.
  • The Journal provides: a focus for on-going and emerging methodological debates across a range of approaches, both qualitative and quantitative, and including mixed, comparative and simulation methods, as these relate to philosophical, theoretical, ethical, political and practical issues…

For a full list of the subject areas this journal covers, please visit the journal website.

Recent articles


Establishing an accompanying approach in social sciences and humanities: a conceptual embedding in second-person ethnography
  • Article

May 2025

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3 Reads

Elvira Crois

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Geert Vandermeersche

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Free De Backer









Using performative participatory research to explore the meanings of sport, celebrity and community in young people's lives
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2025

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19 Reads

Building on the increasing academic interest in collaborative participatory research, this paper introduces Performative Participatory Research (PPR) as a way of meaningfully engaging (young) people in research and ensuring useful outcomes when timescales are short. Our case involved a project exploring young people's engagements with sport, particularly how consumption of football underpins different forms of solidarity, belonging and community. The paper focuses on three activities that were used to not only build rapport and trust but also generate novel perspectives on the subject: a pre-match press conference, a player profile film and the design of a social media campaign. We argue that PPR generates positive outcomes and valuable data when looking to address disempowered or difficult to engage groups in research. Whilst our focus was on the connection between football and celebrity in the lives of young people, the methods could be adapted to understand other cultural interests with other demographics. ARTICLE HISTORY



Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the sampling process (source: authors).
Variables of interest (source: authors).
Multi-layered sampling strategy for qualitative interviews: methodical reflections on sampling interviews with the European Research Council review experts













Enhancing benefits for peer researchers: towards a flexible and needs-based approach to participatory research

October 2024

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30 Reads

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1 Citation

The involvement of peer researchers has recently gained popularity insocial research, and the incentives for using participatory methodologies are well recognised. However, as we argue, the sole presence of peer researchers does not equate to their immediate empowerment, and more attention should be given to the roles they play in the research and the ways in which they can tangibly benefit from such collaborations. We explore the seemingly mundane aspects of work such as recruitment, training, conducting research, dissemination and the afterlife of the project, to suggest that meaningful engagement of peer researchers demands a tailored approach that is receptive to their particular needs and motivations, and is supportive of their individual growth. Our critical reflection stems from a two-year-long collaboration with peer researchers in Poland undertaken as part of a Horizon 2020 project, which explored the lives of young migrants and refugees in Europe.



Journal metrics


3.0 (2023)

Journal Impact Factor™


6%

Acceptance rate


7.9 (2023)

CiteScore™


51 days

Submission to first decision


2.568 (2023)

SNIP


1.387 (2023)

SJR

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