Annette Markham

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Annette Markham

Ph.D.
Annette Markham.JPG
Markham at Microsoft Research Cambridge in 2015
NationalityAmerican
Alma mater Purdue University,
Washington State University,
Idaho State University
Known for qualitative research methods, Internet research ethics, philosophy of method
Scientific career
Fields Internet studies, Information Studies, Science and Technology Studies
Institutions Utrecht University, RMIT,
Aarhus University,
Umea University,
Loyola University Chicago,
University of Illinois Chicago
Thesis Going online: An ethnographic narrative  (1997)
Website www.annettemarkham.com

Annette Markham is an American academic, Chair Professor of Media Literacy and Public Engagement at Utrecht University, Adjunct Professor at RMIT University in Melbourne, [1] and Adjunct Professor of Information Studies at Aarhus University, Denmark. [2] She is Director of RMIT's Digital Ethnography Research Centre. She has served on the executive committee [3] of the Association of Internet Researchers since 2013. She publishes research in the area of Internet studies, digital identity, social interaction, innovative qualitative methods for social research, and Internet research ethics. [4]

Contents

Publications

Markham has authored more than 50 articles since 1995. Her first book, Life Online: Researching real experience in virtual space, was published in 1998, which reviewers called "a definitive sociological study of what it's like to be on the net" [5] and "a bold move in the exponentially increasingly field of internet studies....that allows the reader to appreciate the challenges of applying contemporary ethnographic methods to online populations." [6] In 2009, Markham edited an internet research methods volume titled "Internet Inquiry: Conversations about method" with Nancy Baym. [7] In 2020, Markham and coauthor Katrin Tiidenberg published a followup to Life Online in the form of a curated collection involving 30 contributors, titled Metaphors of Internet: Ways of being in the age of Ubiquity .

Markham has published multiple pieces on Internet research ethics. She is the primary author of the Association of Internet Researchers' official 2012 ethical guidelines for internet research (PDF). The framework of this document uses Markham's earlier published works linking ethics to methods, first in a Norwegian edited volume in 2003 and later in the Journal of Information Ethics. [8] In reviewing ethical frameworks, the Handbook of Internet Studies cites Markham's convincing arguments that "methodological choices inform and are informed by ethical choices." [9] Markham's concept of 'ethics as method' is highlighted in encyclopedic discussions of research ethics and scientific integrity. [10]

Markham's arguments around qualitative methods focus on the importance of context sensitivity, flexible adaptation, and reflexivity. These concepts have been foundational for developing conceptual frameworks for innovative approaches to fieldwork, [11] methods for online interviewing, [12] or reflexivity in data science [13] Markham is cited as a key figure and 'recommended reading' for researching digital contexts in textbooks and handbooks on qualitative research practice. [14] [15] [16] [17]

Markham maintains a blog about a range of conceptual and pragmatic issues related to lived experience in 21st Century contexts of complexity at https://annettemarkham.com.

Education

Academic appointments

Books

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Research</span> Systematic study undertaken to increase knowledge

Research is "creative and systematic work undertaken to increase the stock of knowledge". It involves the collection, organization and analysis of evidence to increase understanding of a topic, characterized by a particular attentiveness to controlling sources of bias and error. These activities are characterized by accounting and controlling for biases. A research project may be an expansion of past work in the field. To test the validity of instruments, procedures, or experiments, research may replicate elements of prior projects or the project as a whole.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ethnography</span> Systematic study of people and cultures

Ethnography is a branch of anthropology and the systematic study of individual cultures. Ethnography explores cultural phenomena from the point of view of the subject of the study. Ethnography is also a type of social research that involves examining the behavior of the participants in a given social situation and understanding the group members' own interpretation of such behavior.

Participant observation is one type of data collection method by practitioner-scholars typically used in qualitative research and ethnography. This type of methodology is employed in many disciplines, particularly anthropology, sociology, communication studies, human geography, and social psychology. Its aim is to gain a close and intimate familiarity with a given group of individuals and their practices through an intensive involvement with people in their cultural environment, usually over an extended period of time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Qualitative research</span> Form of research

Qualitative research is a type of research that aims to gather and analyse non-numerical (descriptive) data in order to gain an understanding of individuals' social reality, including understanding their attitudes, beliefs, and motivation. This type of research typically involves in-depth interviews, focus groups, or observations in order to collect data that is rich in detail and context. Qualitative research is often used to explore complex phenomena or to gain insight into people's experiences and perspectives on a particular topic. It is particularly useful when researchers want to understand the meaning that people attach to their experiences or when they want to uncover the underlying reasons for people's behavior. Qualitative methods include ethnography, grounded theory, discourse analysis, and interpretative phenomenological analysis. Qualitative research methods have been used in sociology, anthropology, political science, psychology, communication studies, social work, folklore, educational research, information science and software engineering research.

Digital anthropology is the anthropological study of the relationship between humans and digital-era technology. The field is new, and thus has a variety of names with a variety of emphases. These include techno-anthropology, digital ethnography, cyberanthropology, and virtual anthropology.

Internet research ethics involves the research ethics of social science, humanities, and scientific research carried out via the Internet.

Capitalization of <i>Internet</i> Conventions for capitalizing word

Orthographic conventions have varied over time, and vary by publishers, authors, and regional preferences, on whether and when Internet should be capitalized. When the Internet first came into common use, most publications treated Internet as a capitalized proper noun, but this has become less common. This reflects the tendency in English to capitalize new terms and move them to lowercase as they become familiar. The word is sometimes still capitalized to distinguish the global internet from smaller networks, though many publications, including the AP Stylebook since 2016, recommend the lowercase form in every case. In 2016, the Oxford English Dictionary found that, based on a study of around 2.5 billion printed and online sources, "Internet" was capitalized in 54% of cases, with Internet being preferred in the United States and internet being preferred in the United Kingdom.

Online ethnography is an online research method that adapts ethnographic methods to the study of the communities and cultures created through computer-mediated social interaction. As modifications of the term ethnography, cyber-ethnography, online ethnography and virtual ethnography designate particular variations regarding the conduct of online fieldwork that adapts ethnographic methodology. There is no canonical approach to cyber-ethnography that prescribes how ethnography is adapted to the online setting. Instead individual researchers are left to specify their own adaptations. Netnography is another form of online ethnography or cyber-ethnography with more specific sets of guidelines and rules, and a common multidisciplinary base of literature and scholars. This article is not about a particular neologism, but the general application of ethnographic methods to online fieldwork as practiced by anthropologists, sociologists, and other scholars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nancy Baym</span> American academic

Nancy Baym is an American scholar and Senior Principal Research Manager at Microsoft Research, formerly a Professor of Communication Studies at the University of Kansas. She was a member of the founding board and former president of the Association of Internet Researchers, and serves on the board of several academic journals covering new media and communication. She has published research and provided media commentary on the topics of social communication, new media, and fandom.

Internet-mediated research (IMR) is the research conducted through the medium of the Internet. In the medical field, it pertains to the practice of gathering medical, biomedical or health related research data via the internet directly from research subjects. The subject, uses a web browser to view and respond to questionnaires that are included in an approved medical research protocol. Other fields such as geography also use IMR as a research tool.

Netnography is a specific type of qualitative social media research. It adapts the methods of ethnography to understand social interaction in contemporary digital communications contexts. Netnography is a specific set of research practices related to data collection, analysis, research ethics, and representation, rooted in participant observation. In netnography, a significant amount of the data originates in and manifests through the digital traces of naturally occurring public conversations recorded by contemporary communications networks. Netnography uses these conversations as data. It is an interpretive research method that adapts the traditional, in-person participant observation techniques of anthropology to the study of interactions and experiences manifesting through digital communications.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sonia Livingstone</span>

Sonia Livingstone is a leading British scholar on the subjects of children, media and the Internet. She is Professor of Social Psychology and former head of the Department of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics and Political Science. While Livingstone’s research has evolved since the start of her career in the 1980s, her recent work explores media and communication in relation to society, children and technology. Livingstone has authored or edited twenty-four books and hundreds of academic articles and chapters. She is known for her continued public engagement about her research areas and has advised the UK government, European Commission, European Parliament, UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, OECD, ITU and UNICEF, among others, on children’s internet safety and rights in the digital environment. In 2014, Livingstone was awarded the title of Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) "for services to children and child Internet safety".

A Digital researcher is a person who uses digital technology such as computers or smartphones and the Internet to do research. Digital research differs from Internet research in that digital researchers use the Internet as a research tool rather than the Internet itself as the subject of study. A digital researcher seeks knowledge as part of a systematic investigation with the specific intent of publishing research findings in an online open access journal or by other social media information exchange formats.

An online interview is an online research method conducted using computer-mediated communication (CMC), such as instant messaging, email, or video. Online interviews require different ethical considerations, sampling and rapport than practices found in traditional face-to-face (F2F) interviews. Online interviews are separated into synchronous online interviews, for example via online chat which happen in 'real time' online and asynchronous online interviews, for example via email conducted in non-real time. Some authors discuss online interviews in relation to online focus groups whereas others look at online interviews as separate research methods. This article will only discuss online interviews.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Interview (research)</span> Research technique

An interview in qualitative research is a conversation where questions are asked to elicit information. The interviewer is usually a professional or paid researcher, sometimes trained, who poses questions to the interviewee, in an alternating series of usually brief questions and answers. They can be contrasted with focus groups in which an interviewer questions a group of people and observes the resulting conversation between interviewees, or surveys which are more anonymous and limit respondents to a range of predetermined answer choices. In addition, there are special considerations when interviewing children. In phenomenological or ethnographic research, interviews are used to uncover the meanings of central themes in the life world of the subjects from their own point of view.

Luc Maria Alfons Pauwels is a Belgian visual sociologist and communication scientist, Professor of Communication Studies at the University of Antwerp, Belgium, and director of its Visual and Digital Cultures Research Center (ViDi). He is known for his work on visual research methods.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Simon Rogerson</span>

Simon Rogerson is lifetime Professor Emeritus in Computer Ethics at the Centre for Computing and Social Responsibility (CCSR), De Montfort University. He was the founder and editor for 19 volumes of the Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society. He has had two careers; first as a technical software developer and then in academia as reformer. He was the founding Director of CCSR, launching it in 1995 at the first ETHICOMP conference which he conceived and co-directed until 2013. He became Europe's first Professor in Computer Ethics in 1998. His most important research focuses on providing rigorously grounded practical tools and guidance to computing practitioners. For his leadership and research achievements in the computer and information ethics interdisciplinary field he was awarded the fifth IFIP-WG9.2 Namur Award in 2000 and the SIGCAS Making a Difference Award in 2005.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norman K. Denzin</span> American sociologist

Norman Kent Denzin was an American professor of sociology. He was an emeritus professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where he was research professor of communications, College of Communications scholar, professor of sociology, professor of cinema studies, professor in the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory. Denzin's academic interests included interpretive theory, performance studies, qualitative research methodology, and the study of media, culture and society.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Janice M. Morse</span> New Zealand-born nursing researcher

Janice Margaret Morse in Blackburn, Lancs., UK to New Zealand parents. She is an anthropologist and nurse researcher who is best known as the founder and chief proponent of the field of qualitative health research. She has taught in the United States and Canada. She received PhDs in transcultural nursing and in anthropology at the University of Utah, where she later held the Ida May “Dotty” Barnes and D Keith Barnes Presidential Endowed Chair in the College of Nursing at University of Utah,. She is also an Emerita Distinguished Professor at the University of Utah and Professor Emerita at the University of Alberta. She is founder of three journals and created four scholarly book series on qualitative research. She was Founding Director of the International Institute of Qualitative Methodology at University of Alberta, the longest standing research institute on qualitative inquiry in the world.

Megan-Jane Johnstone (AO) is a nursing scholar and contemporary artist.

References

  1. "Annette Markham". www.rmit.edu.au. Retrieved 2023-11-21.
  2. "Annette Markham - Research - Aarhus University" . Retrieved 6 May 2015.
  3. "Executive Committee – AoIR". aoir.org. Retrieved 2016-10-20.
  4. Annette Markham publications indexed by Google Scholar
  5. Life-Online-Researching-Real-Experience-in-Virtual-Space. Archived from the original on 2016-11-25. Retrieved 2016-10-20.
  6. Williams, Matthew (2001-12-01). "Book Review: Life Online: Researching Real Experience in Virtual Space". Qualitative Research. 1 (3): 426–427. doi:10.1177/146879410100100313. ISSN   1468-7941. S2CID   144593681.
  7. Markham, Annette; Nancy, Baym (July 2008). Internet inquiry: Conversations about method. Los Angeles: SAGE Publications. ISBN   978-1412910019.
  8. Markham, Annette (November 2006). "Ethic as method, method as ethic". Journal of Information Ethics. 15 (2): 37–54. doi:10.3172/JIE.15.2.37.
  9. Consalvo, Mia; Ess, Charles, eds. (2012-12-17). The Handbook of Internet Studies (1 ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN   9781118400074.
  10. Ess, Charles Melvin (2019), Iphofen, Ron (ed.), "Internet Research Ethics and Social Media", Handbook of Research Ethics and Scientific Integrity, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 1–21, doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-76040-7_12-1 , ISBN   978-3-319-76040-7, S2CID   210534738
  11. Markham, Annette N. (2013-12-01). "Fieldwork in Social MediaWhat Would Malinowski Do?". Qualitative Communication Research. 2 (4): 434–446. doi:10.1525/qcr.2013.2.4.434. ISSN   2161-9107.
  12. James, Nalita; Busher, Hugh (2009). Online interviewing. Los Angeles: Sage. ISBN   978-1-4462-0235-7. OCLC   698104069.
  13. Tanweer, Anissa; Gade, Emily Kalah; Krafft, P. M.; Dreier, Sarah (2021-07-30). "Why the Data Revolution Needs Qualitative Thinking". Harvard Data Science Review. 3 (3). doi: 10.1162/99608f92.eee0b0da . S2CID   237705290.
  14. Silverman, David (2015-01-22). Interpreting Qualitative Data (5th Revised ed.). SAGE Publications Ltd. ISBN   9781446295434.
  15. Paulus, Trena; Lester, Jessica N.; Dempster, Paul (2013-12-27). Digital Tools for Qualitative Research (1 ed.). SAGE Publications Ltd. ISBN   9781446256077.
  16. Lichtman, Marilyn V. (2012-01-20). Qualitative Research in Education: A User's Guide (3 ed.). Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications, Inc. ISBN   9781412995320.
  17. Marshall, Catherine; Rossman, Gretchen B. (2015-01-07). Designing Qualitative Research (6th ed.). SAGE Publications, Inc. ISBN   9781452271002.