Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Translator as Researcher: Co-Producing Research on Food-Based Livelihoods in South Africa

Dlamini, Khulekani T.; Hull, Elizabeth

Authors

Khulekani T. Dlamini



Abstract

This case is based on a project in rural South Africa investigating food access and livelihoods after the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. The research entailed remote collaboration between an anthropologist and a locally based translator. By explaining how the authors developed and used a collaborative research process for qualitative data collection and analysis, it identifies the important factors that make this method feasible and productive. It highlights the ways that the collaborative research process itself generates a distinct body of data from which new insights can be drawn. Informed by decolonizing methodologies, it explores the implications of translation not merely as a technical role but one central to the politics of knowledge production. It discusses the ethical issues encountered in the research, arguing that co-producing and co-authoring research is not a silver bullet to achieving equitable research. Instead, it involves different kinds of power dynamics, institutional and technical constraints, as well as risks to be navigated. Developing critical reflexivity is essential for tackling these challenges.

Citation

Dlamini, K. T., & Hull, E. (in press). Translator as Researcher: Co-Producing Research on Food-Based Livelihoods in South Africa. In Sage Research Methods Cases: Diversifying and Decolonizing Research. Sage. https://doi.org/10.4135/9781529690576

Acceptance Date Nov 1, 2023
Online Publication Date Mar 21, 2024
Deposit Date Jul 5, 2024
Publicly Available Date Mar 22, 2124
Book Title Sage Research Methods Cases: Diversifying and Decolonizing Research
ISBN 9781529690576
DOI https://doi.org/10.4135/9781529690576
Related Public URLs https://methods.sagepub.com/case/translator-as-researcher-producing-food-livelihoods-south-africa