Field work is hard. Our typical day on the
field starts at 6 a.m., because often, the village we have to visit for data
collection is a 2-3 hours’ drive from the town centre where we stay. Rural India
is largely an agrarian society with 70 percent of people living in rural areas
and half of our workforce still engaged in agriculture (2011-12). This means
that we also have to time our field work in a way that we are able to meet the
respondents before they leave to work on the fields. Often this entails
checking with the local inhabitants the timing of electricity and water supply,
and migration and work patterns before making a field plan.
Hence, at the crack
of dawn, we bathe with chilled water (because the hospitality game isn’t really
aced in small towns which become our temporary command stations), leave without
any breakfast, eat some kachoris from the highway and survive the day on
glucose biscuits. In spite of all the hype about progress in toilet
construction, we often have no access to toilets throughout the day. Some of us
carry pee-buddies and sanitizer bottles, as our bodies are not accustomed to that
routine. The village is at times several kilometres away from a pukka road with
no network connectivity, and well-meaning patriarchs of the community warn our
team of largely female researchers to leave in good time, lest we will get
stuck.
As a single woman
conducting interviews and surveys in remote and rural locations, I have often
been questioned about my marital status and reasons thereof. While in our
comfort zones of Delhi and Gurgaon, I often take decisions irrespective of my
gender, in rural areas however, I am forced to comply with the dominant norms
and gender expectations while negotiating risk. Working in rural areas as a
woman means to constantly push myself outside my comfort zones, and make
certain sartorial and tactical choices in order to gain acceptance and be
welcome in the community I am working in, while ensuring my safety.
However, in spite
of taking the necessary precautions, we face unexpected challenges on the
field. Recently, we were working with a particularly marginalised population of Dalit communities which hadn’t been exposed to any intervention programs. While
things went smoothly on the first day of field work, the next day when we went
back to the same village, the community members surrounded us and questioned
our intentions and credentials. This is because after we left the field, some
respondents had told their friends and families that we were asking questions
about pregnancy, abortion practices and other ‘dirty’ things such as condoms
and emergency pills. In our defence, this was an exploratory study on
adolescent sexual health, early pregnancy and health facilities. However, the
community members felt that we were there to promote abortions and birth
control – which in a context where pregnancy is seen as a marker of one’s
fertility and worth, was perceived as an outrageous idea. This was in spite the
fact that we had extensively pre-tested the survey tools for context, wordings,
order and themes. Since we were dealing with a sensitive and taboo subject of
sexual practices, including pre-marital sex and contraceptive use amongst rural
populations, it was important to contextualise the tools and incorporate
innuendos used in local dialects in lieu of terms such as menstrual cycle,
condoms and pre-marital or extra-marital relationships.
However, we were
working in remotely located rural areas of Bihar which had reported high
incidents of child and organ trafficking in the past. This had made the
population suspicious of outsiders and hostile to a group collecting
information on sexual health and practices. In that situation, we had two
options – abandon field work and exclude that village from our sample, or stay,
and assuage the fears of the community, convey our intentions and underline the
importance of understanding health needs of a young population. Even though we
were overwhelmed by the intense reaction, we chose the second strategy and
stayed put. Going forward, we came up with innovative strategies to build trust
on the field, before embarking on data collection.Instances such as these
underline the importance of ethical data collection, and makes us reflect on
our responsibilities as researchers.
At Outline India
we believe that good data serves as an act of democratization as well as enfranchisement
by lending voice to populations which remain unheard in policy making. In that,
good data collection, accompanied by qualitative field work and extensive
researcher notes to contextualise the collected data is at the heart of the
impact generated by Outline India.
In the past, we
have faced a mix of reaction from rural community members. In a lot of cases,
people have welcomed us into their homes, offered tea and shared their
perceptions and problems. At times, close-ended survey based data collection
has spilled over to become long conversations on local and national politics
and policies.
What keeps us
going are the stories we encounter and the people we meet. Last year when I was
in Rajasthan for an endline evaluation of a 3-year program on girl child
education, I met a very interesting family. The couple had 9 children – all
with an age-gap of a year or two. The eldest daughter had already been married
off when she was 16, and had a child of her own. The second eldest daughter
however, got exposure to the campaign material circulated by the program under
evaluation. Bit by bit, she formed her identity, and was on her way to
finishing high school. When we met her, she told us how three years ago her
biggest dream was to get married by the age of 15 and bear children, but now,
she wants to become a teacher.
During field
assignment on sexual and reproductive health exemplified above, I met 14 and
15-year-old mothers, who had been wed at the age of 10 or 12, immediately after
onset of puberty and whose husbands migrate to Punjab for 6 – 9 months as
agricultural labourers. These women then survive on their own, looking older
for their age, and completely unaware of an alternative possibility. I also met
School Headmasters and community leaders who blamed the general lack of
awareness for this and were devoid of any will to make a change or take an
initiative. By conducting that study, and then writing and reporting it, I felt
we are breaking the illusions of ‘developed India’, and inflecting the
narrative of elite circles with real stories, backed by reliable data. It is
the hope that this data will lead to actionable policy and change, is what
motivates us.
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