Qualitative Life Course Methodologies: Critical Reflections from Development Studies
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Family Health
330
05 social sciences
1. No poverty
0507 social and economic geography
Zambia
History, 20th Century
History, 21st Century
300
Mental Health
Socioeconomic Factors
8. Economic growth
Quality of Life
Parent-Child Relations
Social Change
10. No inequality
Brazil
DOI:
10.1111/j.1467-7660.2011.01728.x
Publication Date:
2011-10-04T15:52:51Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
This article reflects on two experiences of applying qualitative life course research in development studies. The first methodology centred on the elicited narratives of older people in Buenos Aires exploring their lifetime relations with their children and their current well-being. The second employed semi-structured interviews with young adults in Zambia to investigate their trajectories towards economic empowerment. In both methodologies, the roles of linked lives and of wider social, economic and political changes were central. The article contributes to critical reflection on methodological choices and trade-offs, by focusing on dilemmas that arise from a desire to address policy makers and more quantitatively-orientated researchers. It explores three themes: the challenges of making sense of disparate narratives of linked lives; the possibilities for engaging with individual subjectivities; and different strategies for situating individual experiences in dynamic social, economic and political contexts.
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CITATIONS (41)
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