Litcius/Paper detail

Ambiguous spaces, empirical traces: Accounting for ignorance when researching around the illicit

Laura Dev, Karly Marie Miller, Juliet Lu, Lauren Withey, Tracy Hruska

2022Progress in Human Geography23 citationsDOI

Abstract

Human geographers investigating socio-environmental change in resource frontiers often encounter illicit activities occurring alongside the licit processes they study. These encounters pose logistical challenges to conducting research and moral and analytical dilemmas for researchers. Illicit activities produce what we refer to as spheres of ambiguity, which obscure certain information, relationships, and phenomena surrounding them. We address the dearth of analytical tools for approaching the uncertainty this generates by bringing concepts from agnotology—the study of ignorance—to bear on research conducted amidst illicit activity, offering a framework for systematically evaluating ambiguous field data that is incompletely observed or reported.

Topics & Concepts

IgnoranceAmbiguityField (mathematics)SociologyEpistemologyPolitical sciencePublic relationsCriminologyComputer scienceLawPhilosophyPure mathematicsMathematicsProgramming languageMining and Resource ManagementWildlife Conservation and Criminology AnalysesGeographies of human-animal interactions