Ethnography in Peace and Conflict Research PDF
Ethnography in Peace and Conflict Research PDF
Ethnography in Peace and Conflict Research PDF
ORGANIZATIONAL ETHNOGRAPHY
Organizational ethnography provides an excellent way to observe the values and relationships
between individuals as well as group identity (Kostera, 2007; Neyland, 2008; Schwartzman,
1993; Ybema, Yanow, Wels, & Kamsteeg, 2009). Recent methodological theory confirms the
appropriateness of ethnographies in conducting qualitative studies of organizations
(Czarniawska-Jorges, 1992; Gellner & Hirsch, 2001; Moeran, 2005; Prasad, 2005; Van Maanen,
1995). Investigation of organizations involves a bifurcated focus—an examination of the work of
the organization as well as an investigation of the culture within the organization because “more
things are going on in organizations than getting the job done” (Pacanowsky & O’Donnell-
Trujillo, 1982, p. 16). Such research entails careful observation of organizational myths, stories,
jokes, symbols, daily routines and gossip to discover deeper shared meanings, values and beliefs
and listening to how participants explain their experience of the organization. My ethnography of
MCC addressed both of these levels—the values communicated by MCC’s work in Uganda and
Kenya as well as the values present in MCC’s organizational culture.
While NGOs present fertile grounds for ethnographic study, nonetheless, surprisingly few
have been conducted and even fewer investigate NGOs working in conflict zones. One of the
reasons, as noted by David Mosse (2005), may be:
Development organisations are in the habit of dealing with criticism and the questioning of their
claims and actions (e.g. through reviews and evaluations). However, they are less tolerant of
research that falls outside design frameworks, that does not appear to be of practical relevance, is
wasteful of time or adds complexity and makes the task of management harder. (p. 12)
This was true for my research and necessitated my selection of participant observation as a way
to justify my presence to MCC. In her description of the difficulty of NGO ethnography, Lisa
Markowitz (2001) writes: “Studying NGOs thus requires doing local fieldwork within a web of
relationships that are inherently unstable among groups of people with whom one has widely
varying relationships” (p. 41). She highlights the necessity of “situating oneself as a researcher
within a nexus of fluid interpersonal and institutional relationships” and “identifying and
tracking the multidirectional flows of information, ideas, and material” (p. 42).
Critical Ethnography
The need to responsibly observe and contend with the unequal distribution of power which is
inherent to the ethnographic methodology gave rise to critical ethnography—a way to “not
choose between critical theory and ethnography” (Noblit, Flores, & Murillo, 2004, p. 4). Critical
ethnography emphasizes the positionality of the researcher, the socially unjust conditions of the
subjects and involves “a moral obligation to make a contribution towards changing those
conditions toward greater freedom and equity” (Madison, 2005, p. 5). This approach rejects the
supposed “neutrality” of the researcher and recognizes the impossibility of achieving the perfect
objectivity that empiricism or positivism promotes. The critical ethnographer must take seriously
the encounter with Otherness and profoundly engage with it while also transparently
acknowledging one’s own positionality and the ways one’s social location influences the
encounter. Peace and conflict studies demands that the researchers demonstrate awareness of
their own power and privilege and the particular lens that it brings to their work in order to
remain consistent with the bedrock values of liberatory peace education (Bajaj & Brantmeier,
2011; Brantmeier, 2007). Critical methodologies can guide researchers and educators in the
production of knowledge that reflects the larger values of peace and social justice.
Phil Carspecken (1996) argues that critical ethnography (or critical qualitative research) as a
methodology highlights the relationship between the findings or outcomes of research and
values. For critical ethnographers, research is not a value-free enterprise but rather a reflection of
deeply held beliefs and worldviews. Critical epistemologies highlight social inequality and lay
the groundwork for social change. The desire to end oppression and build sustainable societies
does not predetermine the findings of research but it sets the agenda and directs the
ethnographer’s gaze. This is precisely why critical ethnographies compliment peace and social
justice research and education.
INTERVIEWS
Interviews often form one of the most important parts of the ethnographic study. These
encounters between the ethnographer and her research subjects create a space in which deeper
understanding of the motivations, feelings, perceptions and meanings can be explored. While
interviews may be fairly unstructured, the researcher should carefully consider what types of
information she hopes to learn in order to ask questions about impressions, motivations and
feelings rather than collecting biographical data (Burgess, 1984; Weiss, 1994).
The semistructured interview allows the researcher to follow a delineated pathway of inquiry
but also to remain open and guided by the insights, feelings and impressions of the informant. In
my fieldwork, I asked open, nondirective questions and interviews occurred in a setting chosen
by the interviewee. Robert Burgess (1984) describes this process of interviewing as
“conversations with purpose,” which appropriately highlights a dialogical encounter rather than
an interrogatory one. By developing rapport and trust with my informants before I interviewed
them, I was able to probe more deeply into the inner lives and complexities of people’s feelings
about MCC. Some of my informants indicated that these conversations were mutually beneficial,
and one research subject commented to another before an interview with me, “Don’t worry about
the interview, talking to Emily was actually kind of therapeutic—just to think about all of these
issues and what they mean. I felt like I should be thanking her!”
Research within Peace and Conflict Studies often means that fieldwork is carried out in a
place with active or recent violent conflict. There is an even higher duty of care that should be
exercised by a researcher in these circumstances as one’s informants may be traumatized.
Carefully considering Mary Anderson’s (1999) Do No Harm approach to work in a conflict zone
is a good ethical starting place.
Interviews alone will not sufficiently capture the nuance and complexity of the selected
community or organization. In the course of my research, while I do not believe anyone
intentionally manipulated me or lied, I certainly observed cases in which professed values
differed from values in practice. As in any social setting, people can be inconsistent or seek
social approval in interviews. Therefore, observation beyond interviews is important to verify
and triangulate findings.
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
Participant observation is a staple ethnographic technique but the depth or degree of
participation/observation may vary greatly. Raymond Gold (1958) described four levels of
participant observation: complete participation (covert research of a group of which one is a
member), participant as observer (research while also acting as a full group member), observer as
participant (research as the primary role with limited participation) and complete observer (no
participation, only observation). Generally participant observation means the researcher is
actively participating in the life of the community or social group while also engaged in research
of the same group. This process requires careful thought about issues of access, entry,
relationships, observation, field notes and ethics (DeWalt & DeWalt, 2011).
My methodology was based on gathering data through participation in and observation of the
lives of my informants as I observed and questioned how my subjects interacted, interpreted their
context and explained the social meanings of the MCC. My participation included observation of
meetings (sometimes acting as the notetaker and offering input when asked), reorganization of
the MCC library and filing system in Uganda, and occasional leadership of peacebuilding
training sessions. I often learned as much as a participant observer by accompanying MCC
volunteers on their weekly grocery shopping as I did observing their organizational meetings. I
encouraged them to share not only their current work experiences but how this related to who
they had been at home in North America. Everything from what they chose to wear to how they
decorated their homes and who their friends were helped me to understand the values that shaped
their lives as MCC volunteers.
I was present with MCC volunteers as they transitioned in and out of their jobs, through
changing relationships with spouses and significant others, through births and deaths. Playing
late night games of speed Scrabble or Uno, witnessing the piercing of noses and ears, doing
yoga, hiking and sharing meals in my apartment were all at least as significant as the time I spent
in meetings, interviews and shadowing MCC workers in their jobs. I became bound up in their
lives and they became bound up in mine, at times blurring the line between the times I was
acting as a researcher and the times I was acting as their friend. My life also changed over the
course of my fieldwork and some of the “characters” in my thesis became involved in my life
outside the PhD work. This was most clearly demonstrated when I was hospitalized in Nairobi
and several of my informants visited me in the hospital and were interviewed from my sick bed
while I was still too ill to leave the house.
Sudhir Venkatesh (2008) described his fieldwork among gangs in Chicago as managing the
tension between being “the hustler” and being “the hustled.” One informant tells Venkatesh,
“They know you can do something for them.... You’re a hustler, I can see it. You’ll do anything
to get what you want” (p. 188, emphasis in original). In their discussion of ethical issues, Gary
Fine and David Shulman (2009) describe ethnographers as “manipulative suitors,” prone to
“flatter to develop a rapport to acquire suitors and whisper sweet nothings to ferret out the truth”
(p. 178). Sometimes when I hung out with volunteers, I worried that I was “hustling” them—
presenting myself as a friend when I was actually carefully observing and writing about
everything they did or said. Managing my own expectations as well as theirs about our
relationship was difficult, particularly as I naturally came to form my own personal opinions and
preferences—feeling drawn to some and irritated by others but still needing to maintain
relationship with all of them. I was concerned that the framework and expectations of friendship
concealed the fact that I was still very much a researcher (Beech, Hibbert, MacIntosh, &
McInnes, 2009). Once the research was over, I remained close friends with some informants but
the relationship faded with others. Interestingly, one of my best friends today is one of my
research subjects from my time in Uganda and I sometimes wonder how our initial roles as
researcher and researched enhances or hinders our relationship now.
While emotional closeness provides many benefits to research, it also has drawbacks. Like
many anthropologists, I sometimes struggled with the fine (and sometimes nonexistent) line
between participant observation and emotional involvement in the lives of my subjects. At times,
I was privy to some intimate details of their lives, information which I did not share in the final
project out of respect for their privacy even when the information was clearly relevant.
Maintaining a critical distance from my research subjects was difficult. Yet I recognized that
even the idea of critical distance privileged certain ways of knowing and created artificial
divisions between thinking and feeling or researcher and researched.
As a participant observer, there are often contesting narratives presented by multiple
informants which will vie to become “the” official version of events depicted in one’s research. I
sometimes felt pulled between multiple allegiances within MCC and the larger Mennonite
community in East Africa. As informants shared simmering organizational conflicts, some
people made clear bids for my sympathy and support. These attempts at triangulation were
difficult to resist but would have threatened my ability to see dynamics through multiple
perspectives. At times, I witnessed underlying conflicts between Mennonite leadership and other
staff, between MCC and a regional Mennonite mission organization, between local partners and
MCC and between current and former MCC volunteers.
While impossible to quantify and difficult to describe, building and maintaining trust is one of
the most salient aspects of fieldwork (van Maanen, 1982). I felt enormous pressure to be
trustworthy and to demonstrate to my informants how deeply committed I was to a responsible
and authentic representation of their lives and their work, even though I was also not a genuine
member of their team. I sensed initial hesitation on the part of MCC leadership in both countries
to my presence. As a Mennonite myself, the Mennonite communitarian ethos somewhat
obligated MCC to allow me access. However, some informants indicated hesitancy about the
implications of my presence. One MCC leader repeatedly joked about reporting “only the good
things,” a quip with a note of seriousness beneath it. At one MCC gathering, a volunteer
cautioned: “we need to watch what we say, there’s a researcher around.” Remarks like this
demonstrated informants’ awareness of my presence and the bearing that my research might
have on their work.
It is important to observe how one’s work and presence is being perceived and experienced by
one’s informants. MCC volunteers often emphasized that my time in the region was “short” and
“just for study”—an observation indicative of their belief that their own work is both “long term”
and “meaningful.” The mild Mennonite bias against higher education and preference for service
was sometimes evident when volunteers explained my work to each other or to outsiders.
Occasionally I witnessed “insider talk” which indicated that I was seen as engaging in something
that was a “luxury” or “superficial” and “not as important” as volunteer work.
ANALYSIS, WRITING, AND DISTRIBUTION
When beginning the writing process, the sheer amount of data collected during the course of
fieldwork can feel overwhelming. Finding common themes and identifying key moments that
stand out can bring a sense of structure to one’s overall research project. I analyzed my data
using a coding process to link information gathered in the field with values found in my literature
review of Mennonite ethics and theology.
One of the advantages of the ethnographic methodology is the use of “thick description” to
illustrate complex and often subtle social dynamics (Geertz, 1973). The ethnographer should not
shy away from thorough description of the context of one’s work—often even the most minute
details can be analyzed to help argue a larger point. This writing will be greatly aided if the
researcher has taken careful and detailed notes throughout fieldwork. It is easy to edit “thick
description” out but difficult to add it in if one has not taken note of it initially.
Confidentiality was not a concern for most MCC volunteers, most of whom would no longer
be with MCC by the time my writing was complete. Nonetheless, I was aware that MCC partners
in particular were taking a risk in criticizing MCC, an institution upon which their livelihood
depended. I respected this confidence by using intentionally vague footnotes which made tracing
comments to a particular informant difficult, thereby protecting their identity. When necessary, I
also protected my informants by withholding certain identifying features (such as gender) when
using their words.
A “member checking” process in which the researcher shares impressions with the informants
helps to present a more nuanced and accurate picture of the fieldwork while also allowing room
for one’s own interpretations of the data (Lincoln & Guba, 1985; Maxwell, 1996; Schwartz-Shea
& Yanow, 2009). As I began the writing process, I continued to correspond with nearly all of my
MCC informants which proved an important source of participant validation. I understood my
fieldwork to be a collaborative effort between myself and my research informants and while the
analysis was mine alone, I wanted to accurately reflect the opinions and stories shared with me.
When the research project was complete, I sent electronic copies of the work (my completed
PhD dissertation) to all of my informants and offered to send paper copies to a few of the
locations in Uganda and Kenya with limited internet connectivity. I was quite anxious to hear
how my research subjects responded to my final portrait of them. The responses were generally
positive though most informants noted that reading a 200 page academic paper was not a high
priority. Those who both read it and continued to correspond with me about it felt pleased that I
had taken care to really understand them, even if they may have disagreed with some of my
analysis. I was initially unnerved that a few of the informants did not agree with everything that I
had written. Did this mean I had failed to represent them faithfully? Was my ethnography
somehow flawed if they did not universally celebrate my depictions? Ultimately, I decided that
this was what separated my scholarly research project from merely recording and describing
data. While my methodology was ethnographic, it still required analysis and interpretation from
me. My objective was not simply to depict the lives, beliefs and practices of a group of aid
workers and beneficiaries but ultimately to analyze and evaluate MCC’s contributions to
peacebuilding and development work. This may be a key difference between an ethnography
conducted in the discipline of anthropology and an ethnography in peace and conflict studies.
CONCLUSION
One of the core features of the field of peace and conflict studies is its interdisciplinary nature.
This means that, by definition, the field must embrace multiple methodologies and disciplinary
approaches to knowledge. I believe that ethnography is a particularly appropriate qualitative
methodology due to its careful attention to power dynamics, multiple epistemologies and
emphasis on coming to understand the Other, not as a poor imitation of the self but as a subject
with valid beliefs, practices and worldviews. Ethnography offers the researchers an opportunity
to immerse themselves in new contexts to understand the complexities of both conflict and
postconflict peacebuilding.
My own experience with ethnography helped me to understand Ugandans and Kenyans
working with MCC on humanitarian relief, development and peacebuilding projects and gave me
the opportunity to understand how the work of a North American NGO appears from multiple
perspectives. However, equally importantly, my ethnographic study was able to help me see
groups which I am intimately connected to (Mennonites, Americans, aid workers) as Other by
providing a way for me to observe and study them. As the line between self and Other, between
helper and helped, between “West” and “the rest” continues to fray, ethnography as a research
methodology will remain a valuable way to understand both ourselves and Others—a core goal
also shared by peace and conflict studies.