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Venturing into the visual voice: combining photos and interviews in phenomenological inquiry around marginalisation and chronic illness

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Andrew Stevenson, Tannia de Castañeda, Jeremy Oldfield & Melanie Klie. (2022) Zones of comfort and imaginability: using Participatory Video Interviewing to explore ecologies of resilience in Guatemala City. Children's Geographies 0:0, pages 1-18.
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Uditha Ramanayake, Cheryl Cockburn-Wootten & Alison J. McIntosh. (2022) The ‘MeBox’ method and the emotional effects of chronic illness on travel. Tourism Geographies 24:2-3, pages 412-434.
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Tracy Karen Mitchell, Lucy Bray, Lucy Blake, Annette Dickinson & Bernie Carter. (2022) ‘I feel like my house was taken away from me’ : Parents' experiences of having home adaptations for their medically complex, technology‐dependent child . Health & Social Care in the Community 30:6.
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Tracy Karen Mitchell, Lucy Bray, Lucy Blake, Annette Dickinson & Bernie Carter. (2022) ‘It doesn't feel like our house anymore’: The impact of medical technology upon life at home for families with a medically complex, technology-dependent child. Health & Place 74, pages 102768.
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Iain R. Williamson, Kerry Quincey, Benjamin J. Lond & Periklis Papaloukas. (2021) Unanticipated voices? Reflections from our ongoing ‘adventures’ with participant-authored photography, interviewing and interpretative phenomenology. Methods in Psychology 5, pages 100062.
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Debbie Meharg, Alison Varey & Sandra Cairncross. (2021) A journey that motivates: Exploring the Associate Students Transition Framework. A journey that motivates: Exploring the Associate Students Transition Framework.
Eva McKinsey, Anna S. Pruitt & Tien Austin. (2021) “It's not the end of the story:” Understanding the continued recovery from homelessness using Photovoice and content analysis. Journal of Community Psychology 49:5, pages 1100-1120.
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Diane Trusson & Kerry Quincey. (2021) Breast Cancer and Hair Loss. Cancer Nursing 44:1, pages 62-70.
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Val Morrison & Karina Williams. (2020) Gaining Longitudinal Accounts of Carers' Experiences Using IPA and Photograph Elicitation. Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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Angie Bartoli. (2019) Every picture tells a story: Combining interpretative phenomenological analysis with visual research. Qualitative Social Work 19:5-6, pages 1007-1021.
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Nicola K. Gale & Manbinder S. Sidhu. (2019) Risk work or resilience work? A qualitative study with community health workers negotiating the tensions between biomedical and community-based forms of health promotion in the United Kingdom. PLOS ONE 14:7, pages e0220109.
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Kriss Fearon. (2019) ‘Have you ever talked to any women with Turner syndrome?’ Using universal design and photo elicitation interviews in research with women with mild cognitive impairment. Methodological Innovations 12:2, pages 205979911984193.
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Andrew Stevenson, Jeremy Oldfield & Emily Ortiz. (2019) Streets of resilience: Exploring the role of educational outreach projects with street connected young people in Guatemala City. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology 29:3, pages 238-253.
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Debbie Meharg, Sandra Cairncross & Alison Varey. (2018) “So far back, I’m anonymous”: Exploring Student Identity using Photovoice. “So far back, I’m anonymous”: Exploring Student Identity using Photovoice.
Toni Louise Williams. (2018) Exploring narratives of physical activity and disability over time: A novel integrated qualitative methods approach. Psychology of Sport and Exercise 37, pages 224-234.
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