Participants should have the right to refuse involvement in the research, and the researcher should tell them about all relevant points so they can make an informed decision. Consent is given beforehand and can be withdrawn at any time
Researchers should keep participants' identity secret to prevent any negative effects on them, as well as respecting their privacy surrounding personal info
Has ethical issues like lying to people to gain their trust, which means you can't get informed consent with covert methods. However, some sociologists think exceptions should be made when investigating secretive/dangerous/powerful groups
Positivists use quantitative data, look for patterns in behaviour, and see sociology as a science, while interpretivists use qualitative data, understand social actors' meanings and reject the idea that sociology is a science
Test a hypothesis in a controlled environment, where the researcher changes the independent variable in the experimental group and measures how this affects the dependent variable. Results are then compared to the control group
Questionnaires and structured interviews are patriarchal and give a distorted and invalid image of women's experience, and instead advocates for using direct observation or unstructured interviews
These methods impose the researcher's categories on women, which means they can't express their experiences of oppression and the unequal power relationship of the sexes is concealed
Interpretivists see unstructured interviews as highly valid as they understand actors' meanings
Positivists see unstructured interview as unable to be quantified, generalised/compared and therefore unrepresentative and invalid because rapports can distort findings
Interpretivists argue official stats lack validity because they do not represent real things/social facts that exist, but instead are socially constructed under that represent the labels some people give to other's behaviour
Letters, diaries, photo albums and autobiographies which are first-hand accounts of social events/personal experiences that often include the writer's personal feelings
A method that systematically deals with the content of documents and is best known for being used to analyse raw data produced documents such as TV programmes