Home 19. CONDUCTING FIELDWORK IN A VIRTUAL SPACE: EXPLORING ISIS’s ENCRYPTED MESSAGING ON TELEGRAM
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

19. CONDUCTING FIELDWORK IN A VIRTUAL SPACE: EXPLORING ISIS’s ENCRYPTED MESSAGING ON TELEGRAM

  • Mia Bloom and Ayse Lokmanoglu
View more publications by Columbia University Press
Stories from the Field
This chapter is in the book Stories from the Field
© 2020 Columbia University Press

© 2020 Columbia University Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS v
  3. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xi
  4. INTRODUCTION: LEARNING THROUGH 1
  5. I. WELCOME TO THE FIELD
  6. 1. FIELDWORK AND EMOTIONS 15
  7. 2. COOKING SOUP AND KILLING CHICKENS: NAVIGATING GENDER AND FOOD-AS-FIELDWORK IN WEST AFRICA 23
  8. 3. RECITE! INTERPRETIVE FIELDWORK FOR POSITIVISTS 36
  9. II. DESIGNING YOUR RESEARCH AND DECIDING WHERE TO GO
  10. 4. FIELDWORK BY DECREE, NOT BY DESIGN 49
  11. 5. CONDUCTING 1,500 SURVEYS IN NEW YORK CITY (WITH GREAT UNCERTAINTY AND A LIMITED BUDGET) 58
  12. 6. HEZBOLLAH WILL TAKE YOUR DATA: HOW TO PLAN FOR RESEARCH AMONG INSURGENTS 64
  13. 7. WHEN THE LINGUISTIC LIGHTWEIGHT GOES ABROAD: RELYING ON SHARP STUDENTS 70
  14. 8. NAVIGATING DATA COLLECTION IN WAR ZONES 75
  15. III. MAKE A PLAN . . . THEN BE READY TO TOSS IT
  16. 9. LET GO AND LET ALI 83
  17. 10. BE PREPARED (TO GO OFF SCRIPT) 88
  18. 11. RADIO GAGA: EVOLVING FIELD EXPERIMENTS IN MALI 93
  19. 12. CROSSED WIRES: INTERVIEWING THE WRONG PEOPLE 102
  20. 13. “YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU’RE GETTING INTO”: DEALING WITH DISHONESTY IN THE FIELD 108
  21. 14. SUCCESSFUL FIELDWORK FOR THE FIELDWORK-HATER 115
  22. IV. CREATIVELY COLLECTING DATA AND EVIDENCE
  23. 15. HOW TO INTERVIEW A TERRORIST 127
  24. 16. STUMBLING AROUND IN THE ARCHIVES 135
  25. 17. DETAILS IN THE DOODLES: DOCUMENTING COVERT ACTION 142
  26. 18. MY STINT AS A UKRAINIAN TAXI DRIVER 151
  27. 19. CONDUCTING FIELDWORK IN A VIRTUAL SPACE: EXPLORING ISIS’s ENCRYPTED MESSAGING ON TELEGRAM 156
  28. 20. ALL THE SIGNS ARE THERE: INCIDENTAL DISCOVERIES DURING FIELDWORK ON GENDER DISCRIMINATION IN RUSSIA 169
  29. 21. LEARNING FROM FOREIGN COLLEAGUES 174
  30. V. DEVELOPING LOCAL KNOWLEDGE
  31. 22. ON FIELD-BEING 183
  32. 23. FIELDWORK ON FOOT 188
  33. 24. THE ONION PRINCIPLE 196
  34. 25. THE INTOXICATION OF FIELDWORK: OBTAINING AUTHORIZATIONS IN BURKINA FASO 202
  35. 26. FIELD RESEARCH AND SECURITY IN A COLLAPSED STATE 209
  36. 27. BUILDING FIELD NETWORKS IN THE ERA OF BIG DATA 215
  37. VI. SEEING AND BEING SEEN: IDENTITY IN THE FIELD
  38. 28. RESEARCHING AN OLD CIVIL WAR CLOSE TO HOME 225
  39. 29. POSITIONALITY AND SUBJECTIVITY IN FIELD RESEARCH 232
  40. 30. RACE AND THE STUDY OF A RACIAL DEMOCRACY 238
  41. 31. “WHY ARE YOU INTERESTED IN THAT ?”: STUDYING RACIAL INEQUALITY IN THE UNITED STATES FROM THE OUTSIDE 245
  42. 32. NAVIGATING BORN AND CHOSEN IDENTITIES IN FIELDWORK 254
  43. VII. BEING ETHICALLY ACCOUNTABLE
  44. 33. ON RESEARCH THAT “MATTERS” 267
  45. 34. THE FIELD IS EVERYWHERE 277
  46. 35. THINGS CHANGE: PROTECTING YOURSELF AND YOUR SOURCES IN UNCERTAIN TIMES 286
  47. 36. ETHNOGRAPHY WITH EXTREMISTS: LIVING IN A FASCIST MILITIA 293
  48. 37. BUILDING TRUST WITH EX-INSURGENTS 303
  49. 38. ON BEING SEEN 312
  50. VIII. STAYING SAFE AND HEALTHY
  51. 39. CONDUCTING SAFE FIELDWORK ON VIOLENCE AND PEACE 321
  52. 40. YOUR SAFETY AND THEIRS: INTERVIEWING SEX-TRAFFICKERS 327
  53. 41. SHINGLES ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL 335
  54. 42. DRINK THE TEA 340
  55. ONE LAST THING BEFORE YOU GO... 344
  56. CONCLUSION: WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO DO FIELDWORK? 364
  57. INDEX 369
Downloaded on 17.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7312/krau19300-021/html
Scroll to top button