<div dir="ltr"><div>Dear RNLDers,<br><br>In preparing an ethics application with a
student, some questions have come up about who can or should decide
about access to recordings (in this case video recordings) of children.<br>
<br>I think we all accept that parents/guardians can give permission for
children to participate in research, but is it appropriate for such
people to make a decision about whether resulting recordings might be
publicly accessible in an archive? <br>
<br>My current position is that parents can give consent for video
recordings of their children to be made, but that they do not have the
right to give consent for such recordings to be publicly exposed. I
think that only the people recorded can give that permission and that
for that permission to be meaningful, it has to be given by an adult.
The consequence is that no video of a child can be publicly exposed
before a] the child has grown up and is able to give informed consent;
and such consent has been given, or b) enough time has passed that the
(then) child can safely be assumed to be no longer living. <br>
<br>The possible scenarios under a) are that the community continue to
use the materials which have been recorded in a project and as children
reach adulthood they want access to their recordings (for the use of the
whole community at least) and they approach the archive to alter the
access conditions; or researchers approach the archive wanting to view
material and then have to seek relevant permissions themselves.<br>
<br>I realise that this may seem a rather extreme position, but I feel
uncomfortable with the idea that a decision might be made on behalf of
someone else which that someone else (the child) might not be happy
about later. And that it is ethically preferable to impose a restriction
that can be relaxed by the affected person rather than that person
having to act to impose a restriction to remedy an undesirable
situation. <br>
<br>I am interested to know other people's thoughts about this.<br><br>(And I'm certainly open to a charge of hypocrisy - I have posted pictures of my children on Facebook.)<br><br></div>Best, Simon<br clear="all">
<br>-- <br><div dir="ltr">Simon Musgrave<br>Lecturer<br>Co-ordinator, <a href="http://www.monash.edu.au/pubs/handbooks/aos/linguistics/ug-arts-linguistics.html" target="_blank">Undergraduate Major in Linguistics</a><br>School of Languages, Literatures, Cultures and Linguistics<br>
Monash University<br>Victoria 3800<br>Australia<br><br><a href="mailto:Simon.Musgrave@monash.edu" target="_blank">Simon.Musgrave@monash.edu</a><br><span>+61 (0)3 9905 8234</span><span dir="ltr"><span dir="ltr"><span><img src=""><span>+61 (0)3 9905 8234</span><span></span></span></span></span> (phone)<br>
+61 (0)3 9905-5437 (fax)<br>Official page:<br><a href="http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/linguistics/staff/smusgrave.php" target="_blank">http://profiles.arts.monash.edu.au/simon-musgrave/</a><br><br><br><a href="http://users.monash.edu.au/~smusgrav/index.html" target="_blank"></a><br>
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