Social policy framing and the researcher
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Global Social Policy
Abstract
In the first few weeks of graduate studies, we were inundated with how to write academi cally. The instructor emphasized how academic writing differs from other forms of writ ing. Then, the class was given a written assignment, with the comments suggesting that
we were not there yet. So, the next couple of months were spent mastering this style of
writing. Yet, the process of learning never ended! Time and again, manuscripts are
returned with revision or rejection comments that take issues with the proper academic
writing style. This is such a universal experience that at a workshop on reflexivity in
social policy, a colleague openly expressed their frustration and fear that their manuscript
may not be accepted because of the way it has been written or framed.
Constructivist or interpretivist research perspectives view reality as experienced dif ferently and thus, socially constructed both by the participants and researchers (Creswell,
2013; Mertens, 2015). In acknowledgement of the role and influence of the scientists’
lived experiences on their research and its interpretation, self-reflection is encouraged in
the process of research. Similarly, scholarly work could be validated through a process
of self-reflection (Dennis, 2018). By extension then, this process of intra-activity can
impact the way a study is communicated either through writing or presentation. While
communicating social policy by following all the requirements of academic practice is
important, communicating it in a way that feels authentic to the scholar is important, too.
However, the demand of academic writing means that, in scholarly works especially,
qualitative studies must align with what Dennis (2018: 110) describes as the
truth correspondence logics and empiricist forms of realism [which] set anchor into [our]
methodological conversations about validity in such a way as to make it quite difficult to free
ourselves from related assumptions when we enact validity practices in our research.
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Research Article