"The Methods and Meanings of Collaborative Team Research"

Date

2010

Authors

Hyndman, Jennifer
Jamal, Arif
McLean, James
Houston, Serin D.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sage Publications

Abstract

Team research enables the collection of multiple, sometimes conflicting, stories of migration, family, and belonging. Using common qualitative methods within a team research context can stretch these research techniques in productive and instructive ways and proffer new insight and meaning. Therefore, the authors suggest that team research offers an important avenue for both extending qualitative methods and expanding interpretative lenses. To illustrate these points, the authors draw upon their study of the settlement and migration patterns of East African Shia Ismaili Muslims in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and discuss their experiences with focus group effects, the simultaneous household interview strategy, and postinterview dialogues. The article highlights how these three techniques and effects enacted in the team research context helped the authors explicitly locate contradictions, ambiguities, and paradoxes within the narratives of first- and second-generation Ismailis.

Description

Keywords

collaborative team research; focus groups; household interviews; Ismailis; qualitative methods

Citation

Jennifer Hyndman, Serin D. Houston, James McLean, and Arif Jamal, "The Methods and Meanings of Collaborative Team Research," Qualitative Inquiry 16.4 (April 2010): 285-297.