RCIS

Revista de Cercetare si Interventie Sociala

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Asking for Parental Consent in Research on Exposure of Children to Violence

Asking for Parental Consent in Research on Exposure of Children to Violence

Autori:

Maria ROTH, Corina VOICU, Agnes DÁVID-KACSÓ, Imola ANTAL, Ana MUNTEAN, Sorina BUMBULUŢ, Cristina BACIU

Cod: ISSN: 1583-3410 (print), ISSN: 1584-5397 (electronic)
Dimensiuni: pp. 85-100



How to cite this article:

Roth, M., Voicu, C., David-Kacso, A., Antal, I., Muntean, A., Bumbuluţ, S., Baciu, C. (2013). Asking for Parental Consent in Research on Exposure of Children to Violence. Revista de Cercetare si Interventie Sociala ,42, 85-100.



Abstract:

Based on the principles of United Nations Children’s Rights Convention (CRC) and the data collected by the Balkan Epidemiologic Study on CAN (BECAN, an EU’s FP7 funded project, http://www.becan.eu), we argue that similar to adults, children should be granted the right to decide on their participation in research on violence. We have a human rights approach: in the first part of the paper we discuss children’s competence, their right to privacy and to give informed consent, as well as their need to be protected against any harm possibly caused by their participation in research. The second part of the paper is focused on the specific ethical considerations and the procedures of consent followed in the BECAN project. Along this research project the Romanian team has been confronted with a large number of parental refusals, which resulted in the exclusion of 29.39% of 5th graders and 24.56% of 7th graders, due to parental gate-keeping. However, less than 1% of the children have refused to participate. In the third part we present children’s views on their involvement in research that asks about their exposure to violence. We set up focus-groups with children same age as those involved in the BECAN research. Responses generally favor the opinion that children from all three age-groups should decide on their own if they want or not to take part in a survey on such a subject. We conclude that in order to understand the multiple facets of children’s victimization we cannot avoid involving children in research.

Keywords:

children’s rights; ethical dilemma; consent procedure; research on violence; focus group; rights based approach.


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