Give qualitative research the recognition it deserves
Artikel in Fachzeitschrift › Forschung › begutachtet
Publikationsdaten
| Von | Anna Lena Bercht, Verena Sandner Le Gall, Jürgen Straub, Tim Niclas Höffler, Judith Bopp, Inken Carstensen-Egwuom, Libertad Chavez-Rodriguez, Cordula Dittmer, Florian Dünckmann, Kathrin Eitel, Christian Elster, Zine-Eddine Hathat, Jonas Hein, Silja Klepp, Daniel F. Lorenz, Romina Martin, Laura Otto, Martin Sarnow, Martin Voss, Rainer Wehrhahn, Sören Weißermel, Cosima Werner |
| Originalsprache | Englisch |
| Erschienen in | Journal of Environmental Psychology, 96, Artikel 102320 |
| Herausgeber (Verlag) | Elsevier |
| ISSN | 0272-4944, 1522-9610 |
| DOI/Link | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2024.102320 |
| Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht – 06.2024 |
| Keywords | Empowerment, Qualitative research, Social justice, Interdisciplinarity, Sensitive subjects, Methodological pluralism |
Ratcliffe et al. (2024, JEP 93, Art. 102199) raise concern about the exclusion of purely qualitative research from JEP, as proposed by Schultz and McCunn's editorial stance published in 2022. We support Ratcliffe et al.’s call for equal recognition of qualitative work alongside quantitative work in environmental psychology. Our article aims to contribute to this debate by presenting five additional points that emphasise the importance of qualitative contributions in advancing environmental psychology research. Through illustrative examples, we demonstrate how qualitative methods can reveal overlooked aspects, empower marginalised groups, promote social justice, and adapt to dynamic contexts and sensitive topics. We argue that qualitative research is as rigorous as quantitative research and offers insights that quantitative measures may fail to capture. Embracing qualitative contributions alongside quantitative work would advance interdisciplinary dialogue, strengthen environmental psychology and promote a comprehensive understanding of human-environment relationships.