What type of qualitative research when you conduct a study about the culture and traditions of a specific tribe?

  • Coughlin, C. (n.d.). An ethnographic study of main events during hospitalisation: perceptions of nurses and patients. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 22(15–16), 2327–2337.  

  • Molloy, L., Walker, K., Lakeman, R., & Lees, D. (2019). Mental Health Nursing Practice and Indigenous Australians: A Multi-Sited Ethnography. Issues in Mental Health Nursing, 40(1), 21–27. 

  • Rainsford, S., Phillips, C. B., Glasgow, N. J., MacLeod, R. D., & Wiles, R. B. (2018). The ‘safe death’: An ethnographic study exploring the perspectives of rural palliative care patients and family caregivers. Palliative Medicine, 32(10), 1575–1583. 

  • Newnham, E., McKellar, L., & Pincombe, J. (2017). ‘It’s your body, but…’ Mixed messages in childbirth education: Findings from a hospital ethnography. Midwifery, 55, 53–59 

  • King, P. (2019). The woven self: An auto-ethnography of cultural disruption and connectedness. International Perspectives in Psychology: Research, Practice, Consultation, 8(3), 107–123.