1. Introduction
2. The theoretical foundations of IPA
3. Planning an IPA research study
4. Collecting data
5. Analysis
6. Writing
7. Advanced designs and innovative approches
8. Connecting IPA with perspectives in the human sciences
9. Assessing validity and quality
10. Research Exemplar A: Health and illness
11. Research Exemplar B: Psychological distress
12. Research Exemplar C: Identity and life transitions
13. Conclusion and reflections on future developments
Jonathan A. Smith is Professor of Psychology at Birkbeck University of London, UK where he leads the interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA) research group. He has written many articles applying IPA to a range of areas in health, clinical and social psychology. He is co- author (with Paul Flowers and Michael Larkin) of Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis: Theory, Method and Research (Sage, 2009). He also has a wider interest in qualitative psychology generally and has co-edited a number of books in the area.
I have been using this book since it was published - recommending
it to undergraduate and postgraduate students both as the
definitive account of the IPA approach and as an accessible
introduction to experiential qualitative research more broadly. The
chapters on designing an IPA study, collecting and analysing data,
and writing up an IPA study in particular are excellent...This book
remains an invaluable addition to the toolkit of resources for
teachers and students of qualitative research, and I thoroughly
recommend it to both.
*Psychology: Learning and Teaching, Volume 9, Number 1*
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