Authors
Sue Wilkinson
Publication date
1999/6
Journal
Psychology of women quarterly
Volume
23
Issue
2
Pages
221-244
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Focus groups are little used in feminist psychology, despite their methodological advantages. Following a brief introduction to the method, the article details three key ways in which the use of focus groups addresses the feminist critique of traditional methods in psychology. Focus groups are relatively naturalistic and so avoid the charge of artificiality; they offer social contexts for meaning‐making and so avoid the charge of decontextualization; and they shift the balance of power away from the researcher toward the research participants and so avoid the charge of exploitation. The final section of the article, which evaluates the potential of focus groups for feminist research, identifies some other benefits of the method and also discusses some problems in the current use of focus groups. It concludes that the use—and development—of focus group methods offer feminist psychology an excellent opportunity for the future.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Wilkinson - Psychology of women quarterly, 1999