3.3 Benefits and harms of research across the ecosystem
Learning Objectives
Learners will be able to…
- Identify and distinguish between micro-, meso-, and macro-level considerations with respect to the ethical conduct of social scientific research
This chapter began with a long list of harmful acts that researchers engaged in while conducting studies on human subjects. Indeed, even the last section on informed consent and protection of confidential information can be seen in light of minimizing harm and maximizing benefits. The benefits of your study should be greater than the harms. But who benefits from your research study, and who might be harmed? The first person who benefits is, most clearly, you as the researcher. You need a project to complete, be it for a grade, a grant, an academic responsibility, etc. However you need to make sure that your benefit does not come at the expense of harming others. Furthermore, research requires resources, including resources from the communities we work with. Part of being good stewards of these resources as social work researchers means that we need to engage in research that benefits the people we serve in meaningful and relevant ways. We need to consider how others are impacted by our research.
Micro-, meso-, and macro-level concerns
One useful way to think about the breadth of ethical questions that might arise out of any research project is to think about potential issues from the perspective of different analytical levels that are familiar to us as social workers. In Chapter 1, you learned about the micro, meso, and macro levels of inquiry and how a researcher’s specific point of focus might vary depending on her level of inquiry. Here we’ll apply this ecological framework to a discussion of research ethics. Within most research projects, there are specific questions that arise for researchers at each of these three levels.
At the micro-level, researchers must consider their own conduct and the impact on individual research participants. For example, did Stanley Milgram behave ethically when he allowed research participants to think that they were administering electric shocks to fellow participants? Did Laud Humphreys behave ethically when he deceived his research subjects about his own identity? Were the rights of individuals in these studies protected? How did these participants benefit themselves from the research that was conducted? While not social workers by profession, would the actions of these two researchers hold up against our professional NASW Code of Ethics? The questions posed here are the sort that you will want to ask yourself as a researcher when considering ethics at the micro-level.
At the meso-level, researchers should think about their duty to the community. How will the results of your study impact your target population? Ideally, your results will benefit your target population by identifying important areas for social workers to intervene and to better understand the experiences of the communities they serve. However, it is possible that your study may perpetuate negative stereotypes about your target population or damage its reputation. Indigenous people in particular have highlighted how historically social science has furthered marginalization of indigenous peoples (Smith, 2013).[1] Meso-level concerns should also address other groups or organizations that are connected to your target population. This may include the human service agencies with whom you’ve partnered for your study as well as the communities and peoples they serve. If your study reflected negatively on a particular housing project in your area, for example, will community members seek to remove it from their community? Or might it draw increased law enforcement presence that is unwanted by participants or community members? Research is a powerful tool and can be used for many purposes, not all of them altruistic. In addition, research findings can have many implications, intended and unintended. As responsible researchers, we need to do our best to thoughtfully anticipate these consequences.
Finally, at the macro-level, a researcher should consider duty to, and the expectations of, society. Perhaps the most high-profile case involving macro-level questions of research ethics comes from debates over whether to use data gathered by, or cite published studies based on data gathered from, the Nazis in the course of their unethical and horrendous experiments on humans during World War II (Moe, 1984).[2] Some argue that because the data were gathered in such an unquestionably unethical manner, they should never be used. The data, say these people, are neither valid nor reliable and should therefore not be used in any current scientific investigation (Berger, 1990).[3]
On the other hand, some people argue that data themselves are neutral; that “information gathered is independent of the ethics of the methods and that the two are not linked together” (Pozos, 1992, p. 104).[4] Others point out that not using the data could inadvertently strengthen the claims of those who deny that the Holocaust ever happened. In his striking statement in support of publishing the data, medical ethics professor Velvl Greene (1992)[5] says,
Instead of banning the Nazi data or assigning it to some archivist or custodial committee, I maintain that it be exhumed, printed, and disseminated to every medical school in the world along with the details of methodology and the names of the doctors who did it, whether or not they were indicted, acquitted, or hanged.…Let the students and the residents and the young doctors know that this was not ancient history or an episode from a horror movie where the actors get up after filming and prepare for another role. It was real. It happened yesterday (p. 169–170).[6]
While debates about the use of data collected by the Nazis are typically centered on medical scientists’ use of them, there are conceivable circumstances under which these data might be used by social scientists. Perhaps, for example, a social scientist might wish to examine contemporary reactions to the experiments. Or perhaps the data could be used in a study of the sociology of science. What do you think? Should data gathered by the Nazis be used or cited today? What arguments can you make in support of your position, and how would you respond to those who disagree?
Additionally at the macro-level, you must also consider your responsibilities to the profession of social work. When you engage in social work research, you stand on the reputation the profession has built for over a century. Since research is public-facing, meaning that research findings are intended to be shared publicly, you are an ambassador for the profession. How you conduct yourself as a social work researcher has potential implications for how the public perceives both social work and research. As a social worker, you have a responsibility to work towards greater social, environmental, and economic justice and human rights. Your research should reflect this responsibility. Attending to research ethics helps to fulfill your responsibilities to the profession, in addition to your target population.
Table 3.2 summarizes the key questions that researchers might ask themselves about the ethics of their research at each level of inquiry.
Level of inquiry | Focus | Key ethics questions for researchers to ask themselves |
Micro-level | Individual | Does my research interfere with the individual’s right to privacy? |
Could my research offend subjects in any way, either the collection of data or the sharing of findings? | ||
Could my research cause emotional distress to any of my subjects?
In what ways does my research benefit me? In what ways does my research benefit participants? |
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Has my own conduct been ethical throughout the research process? | ||
Meso-level | Group | How does my research portray my target population? |
Could my research positively or negatively impact various communities and the systems they are connected to?
How do community members perceive my research? |
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Have I met my duty to those who funded my research?
What are potential ripple effects for my target population by conducting this research? |
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Macro-level | Society | Does my research meet the societal expectations of social research?
What is the historical, political, social context of my research topic? |
Have I met my social responsibilities as a researcher and as a social worker?
Does my research follow the ethical guidelines of my profession and discipline? How does my research advance social, environmental or economic justice and/or human rights? How does my research reinforce or challenge systems of power, control and structural oppression? |
Key Takeaways
- At the micro-level, researchers should consider their own conduct and the rights of individual research participants.
- At the meso-level, researchers should consider the expectations of their profession, any organizations that may have funded their research, and the communities affected by their research.
- At the macro-level, researchers should consider their duty to and the expectations of society with respect to social science research.
Exercises
TRACK 1 (IF YOU ARE CREATING A RESEARCH PROPOSAL FOR THIS CLASS):
- Summarize the benefits and harms at the micro-, meso-, and macro-level of inquiry. At which level of inquiry is your research project?
- In a few sentences, identify whether the benefits of your study outweigh the potential harms.
TRACK 2 (IF YOU AREN’T CREATING A RESEARCH PROPOSAL FOR THIS CLASS):
Imagine you are interested in learning more about access to family planning services (e.g. contraception and pregnancy counseling) among immigrants in the United States.
- Based on the research project above, summarize the benefits and harms at the micro-, meso-, and macro-level of inquiry. At which level of inquiry is this research project?
- Identify potential harms and benefits for participating in this project. Do the benefits outweigh the potential harms?
- Smith, L. T. (2013). Decolonizing methodologies: Research and indigenous peoples (2nd edition). London: Zed Books, Ltd. ↵
- Moe, K. (1984). Should the Nazi research data be cited? The Hastings Center Report, 14, 5–7. ↵
- Berger, P. L. (1990). Nazi science: The Dachau hypothermia experiments. New England Journal of Medicine, 322, 1435–1440. ↵
- Pozos, R. S. (1992). Scientific inquiry and ethics: The Dachau data. In A. L. Caplan (Ed.), When medicine went mad: Bioethics and the Holocaust (p. 104). Totowa, NJ: Humana Press. ↵
- Greene, V. W. (1992). Can scientists use information derived from the concentration camps? Ancient answers to new questions. In A. L. Caplan (Ed.), When medicine went mad: Bioethics and the Holocaust (p. 169–170). Totowa, NJ: Humana Press. ↵
- Greene, V. W. (1992). Can scientists use information derived from the concentration camps? Ancient answers to new questions. In A. L. Caplan (Ed.), When medicine went mad: Bioethics and the Holocaust (p. 169–170). Totowa, NJ: Humana Press. ↵