000 01906cab a2200193 a 4500
001 024253
003 UAHC_CL
005 20250925193243.0
008 250925s2002 ge 000 speng d
040 _aUAHC_CL
_cUAHC_CL
_dUAHC_CL
100 _aBrown, David
_922326
245 1 0 _aGoing digital and staying qualitative :
_bsome alternative strategies for digitizing the qualitative research process
_cDavid Brown.
264 _c2002.
300 _a17 páginas.
500 _aEn: Forum: Qualitative Social Research, volumen 3, número 2, 2002, entre las páginas 127-149. ISSN: 07183402.
520 _aQualitative research is rapidly changing as a result of the deployment of Information Technologies (IT). Practices that have taken decades to evolve are being redefined by contemporary computing power. Since the 1990s one of the buzzwords in the computing, communications and technology industries has been "Digital Convergence"—the digitizing of different media forms. Digitization is an ongoing phenomenon, constantly developing and evolving the way we communicate and interact—a product of reflexive modernity, but what does it mean for the qualitative research as a process and how might we make use of it? The paper responds to these questions by making some practical suggestions for digitized strategies and processes that qualitative researchers might draw on eclectically in order to express freely their own creative abilities, which in turn facilitates the opening up of new idiographic avenues for exploring and disseminating subjective experience. In so doing the paper juxtaposes the alternative manual nature of these strategies with other developments that are increasingly orientated towards semi-automated computerized data processing.
856 _3Acceso electrónico al documento
_uhttps://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/851/1848
942 _cRL
_2ddc
999 _c63051
_d63051