Dialogical principles for qualitative inquiry: a nonfoundational path

Auteurs-es

  • Marlei Pozzebon Professor HEC Montreal Associate Professor Fundaçao Getulio Vargas - Escola de Administraçao de Empresas de Sao Paulo
  • Charo Rodriguez McGill University
  • Maira Petrini Associate Professor at Pontificia Universidade Catolica do RS

Résumé

Leaving the thesis proposal defense room, the PhD business student had an important assignment to accomplish before being authorized to set a date for defending her thesis: to better justify the validity of her qualitative inquiry framed by a critical interpretive standpoint. Knowing that the generation, analysis and interpretation of empirical materials are processes always conducted within some understanding of what constitutes legitimate inquiry and valid knowledge, she drew inspiration from ethnographical, confessional, critical and post-modern work to propose a set of dialogical principles for conducting and evaluating a nonfoundational type of research inquiry. This manuscript revisits this venture a number of years later, reflecting on what has changed and what is still missing. We argue that there is a space and an occasion in the research methods literature for proposing dialogical principles for nonfoundational research, principles that are particularly relevant for qualitative researchers struggling in worldwide business schools.

Bibliographies de l'auteur-e

Marlei Pozzebon, Professor HEC Montreal Associate Professor Fundaçao Getulio Vargas - Escola de Administraçao de Empresas de Sao Paulo

Associate professor at the International Business Department

Charo Rodriguez, McGill University

Assistant Professor in the area of Health Services and Policy Research of the McGill Department of Family Medicine as of June 2003

Maira Petrini, Associate Professor at Pontificia Universidade Catolica do RS

Associate Professor at Pontificia Universidade Catolica do RS

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Publié-e

2014-09-24

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