Authors
Sue Adams, Jenny Carryer, Jillian Wilkinson
Publication date
2015/3/1
Publisher
Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington
Description
This article introduces institutional ethnography as a valuable approach to sociological inquiry for health and nursing research in New Zealand. Institutional ethnography has gained increasing prominence across the world because of the potential transformative nature of the research. Institutional ethnography explores how everyday activities and experiences are coordinated by the ruling relations and their institutional processes and discourses. By mapping how our everyday lives are textually organised, the ruling relations are made explicit. This article provides an overview of institutional ethnography, introducing key concepts. Research particularly relevant to health and nursing will be referred to as a way of showing the value of institutional ethnography to nurse researchers. The paper concludes by describing how institutional ethnography is being used in research on establishing nurse practitioners and their services in rural primary health care.
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