AckerS. (2000). In/out/side: Positioning the researcher in feminist research. Resources for Feminist Research, 28, 189–210.
2.
AitkenG.BurmanE. (1999). Keeping and crossing professional and racialized boundaries: Implications for feminist practice. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 23, 277–297.
3.
BrannickT.CoghlanD. (2007). In defense of being ‘native’: The case for insider academic research. Organizational Research Methods, 10, 59–74.
4.
BurnsE.FenwickJ.SchmiedV.SheehanA. (2012). Reflexivity in midwifery research: The insider/outsider debate. Midwifery, 28, 52–60.
5.
ChavezC. (2008). Conceptualizing from the inside: Advantages, complications, and demands on insider positionality. The Qualitative Report, 13, 474–494.
6.
ChmielewskiJ. F.YostM. R. (2013). Psychosocial influences on bisexual women’s body image: Negotiating gender and sexuality. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 37, 242–250.
7.
ClarkeV.KitzingerC.PotterJ. (2004). ‘Kids are just cruel anyway’: Lesbian and gay parents’ talk about homophobic bullying. British Journal of Social Psychology, 43, 531–550.
8.
EllisC. (1995). Final negotiations: A story of love, loss and chronic illness. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
9.
EllisC.BochnerA. P. (2000). Auto-ethnography, personal narrative, reflexivity. In Denzin N. K.LincolnY. S. (Eds.), The handbook of qualitative research (2nd ed., pp. 733–767). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
10.
FineM. (1994). Dis-stance and other stances: Negotiations of power inside feminist research. In GitlinA. D. (Ed.), Power and method: Political activism and educational research (pp. 13–35). New York, NY: Routledge.
11.
FishJ.WilkinsonS. (2003). Understanding lesbians’ healthcare behaviour: The case of breast self-examination. Social Science & Medicine, 56, 235–245.
12.
FosterJ. (2009). Insider research with family members who have a member living with rare cancer. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 8, 16–26.
13.
GairS. (2012). Feeling their stories: Contemplating empathy, insider/outsider positionings, and enriching qualitative research. Qualitative Health Research, 22, 134–143.
14.
HarawayD. (1988). Situated knowledges: The science question in feminism and the privilege of partial perspective. Feminist Studies, 14, 575–599.
15.
HellawellD. (2006). Inside-out: Analysis of the insider-outsider concept as a heuristic device to develop reflexivity in students doing qualitative research. Teaching in Higher Education, 11, 483–494.
16.
HodkinsonP. (2005). ‘Insider research’ in the study of youth cultures. Journal of Youth Studies, 8, 123–149.
17.
KippaxS.CrawfordJ.BentonP.GaultU.NoesjirwanJ. (1988). Contructiong emotions: Weaving meaning from memories. British Journal of Social Psychology, 27, 19–33.
18.
KitzingerC. (1987). The social construction of lesbianism. London, England: Sage.
19.
KitzingerC.KitzingerJ. (2010). ‘Giving voice to the voiceless’—high-tech speculation, or basic respect?The Psychologist, 23, 450–451.
KitzingerJ.KitzingerC. (2012). The ‘window of opportunity’ for death after severe brain injury: Family experiences. Sociology of Health and Illness. Advance online publication. doi:10.1111/1467-9566.12020
22.
KitzingerC.PeelE. (2005). The de-gaying and re-gaying of AIDS: Contested homophobias in lesbian and gay awareness training. Discourse & Society, 16, 173–197.
23.
KitzingerC.WilkinsonS. (1995). Transitions from heterosexuality to lesbianism: The discursive production of lesbian identities. Developmental Psychology, 31, 95–104.
24.
KitzingerC.WilkinsonS. (2004a). The re-branding of marriage: Why we got married instead of registering a civil partnership. Feminism & Psychology, 14, 127–150.
25.
KitzingerC.WilkinsonS. (2004b). Social advocacy for equal marriage: The politics of ‘rights’ and the psychology of ‘mental health’. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 4, 173–194.
26.
LewisD. K. (1973). Anthropology and colonialism. Current Anthropology, 14, 581–602.
MertonR. (1972). Insiders and outsiders: A chapter in the sociology of knowledge. American Journal of Sociology, 78, 9–47.
29.
NaplesN. A. (1996). A feminist revisiting of the insider/outsider debate: The ‘outsider’ phenomenon in rural Iowa. Qualitative Sociology, 19, 83–106.
30.
OchiengB. (2010). ‘You know what I mean’: The ethical and methodological dilemmas for Black researchers interviewing Black families. Qualitative Health Research, 20, 1725–1735.
31.
PaechterC. (2013). Researching sensitive issues online: Implications of a hybrid insider/outsider position in a retrospective ethnographic study. Qualitative Research, 13, 71–86.
32.
ReayD. (1996). Insider perspectives or stealing the words out of women’s mouths: Interpretation in the research process. Feminist Review, 53, 57–63.
33.
StephensonN.KippaxS.CrawfordJ. (1996) You and I and she: Memory-work and the construction of self. In WilkinsonS. (Ed.), Feminist social psychologies: International perspectives (pp. 182–200). Buckingham, England: Open University Press.
34.
TaylorJ. (2011). The intimate insider: Negotiating the ethics of friendship when doing insider research. Qualitative Research, 11, 3–22.
35.
ThorneS. E.PatersonB. L. (2000). Two decades of insider research: What we know and don’t know about chronic illness experience. In GoeppingerJ. (Ed.), Annual review of nursing research (Vol. 18, pp. 3–25). New York, NY: Springer.
36.
UngerR. K. (1983). Through the looking glass: No wonderland yet! (The reciprocal relationship between methodology and models of reality.)Psychology of Women Quarterly, 8, 9–29.
37.
WilkinsonS. (1988). The role of reflexivity in feminist psychology. Women’s Studies International Forum, 11, 493–502.
38.
WilkinsonS. (2000). Breast cancer: A feminist perspective. In UssherJ. M. (Ed.), Women's health: Contemporary international perspectives (pp. 230–237). Leicester, England: British Psychological Society.
39.
WilkinsonS. (2004). Equal marriage/le droit égal au marriage: A personal view from Canada. Feminism & Psychology, 14, 9–15.
40.
WilkinsonS. (2010). The right to marry: Campaigning for social change. Psychology of Women Section Review, 12, 24–28.
41.
WilkinsonS.KitzingerC. (Eds.). (1996). Representing the other: A ‘Feminism & Psychology’ reader. London, England: Sage.
42.
WilkinsonS.KitzingerC. (2007). Editorial for special feature: After Wilkinson v Kitzinger: The future for same-sex marriage. Lesbian & Gay Psychology Review, 8, 3–11.
43.
WilkinsonS.KitzingerC. (2008a). Conversation analysis. In Willig C.Stainton-RogersW. (Eds.), The Sage handbook of qualitative research in psychology (pp. 54–72). London, England: Sage.
44.
WilkinsonS.KitzingerC. (2008b). Using conversation analysis in feminist and critical research. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 2, 555–573.
45.
YostM. R.ChmielewskiJ. F. (2013). Blurring the lines between researcher and researched in interview studies: A feminist practice?Psychology of Women Quarterly, 37, 242–250.
46.
ZubairM.MartinW.VictorC. (2012). Embodying gender, age, ethnicity and power in ‘the field’: Reflections on dress and the presentation of the self in research with older Pakistani Muslims. Sociological Research Online, 17, 21. doi:10.5153/sro.2667