Autoři/Authors
Martin Šimon
Christoph van Dülmen
Susann Bischof
Josef Bernard
Sylvia Keim-Klärner
Anja Decker
Hana Daňková
Max Eysholdt
Andreas Klärner
Kategorie/Category
WoS a SCOPUS
Rok publikace/Published
2024
Název publikace/Name
The Mobility Interview: Triangulating Interview and Global Positioning System Data to Explore the Role of Mobility in Everyday Life
Citace/Citation
van Dülmen, C., Šimon, M., Bischof, S., Bernard, J., Keim-Klärner, S., Decker, A., Daňková, H., Eysholdt, M., & Klärner, A. (2024): The Mobility Interview: Triangulating Interview and Global Positioning System Data to Explore the Role of Mobility in Everyday Life. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 23. https://doi.org/10.1177/16094069241251535
Abstrakt/Abstract
This article presents a mixed-methods research protocol suitable for studying everyday mobility and its effects on life chances for a wide range of populations. We argue that it can address, among other issues, two important methodological challenges in the study of mobility: addressing pre-reflexivity and habits, as well as differentiating between voluntary and forced movements. The research protocol combines a problem-centered interview, two weeks of GPS tracking, and a subsequent mobility interview. It has been shaped by its application to more than 60 socially disadvantaged residents of rural peripheries as part of an international research project. It contributes to existing qualitative methods of spatial analysis because its design incorporates not only theoretical considerations but also insights of real-world application from conducting it in varied contexts and with different populations, which are typically underrepresented in more elaborate research designs. Nevertheless, due to its thematic openness, the design is not only interesting for mobility research, but also for other research focusing on spatial phenomena at the individual level. We provide a detailed account of the method’s implementation, contextualize it in relation to previous approaches, and discuss the analytical potential of the data obtained. We suggest that by triangulating movement data with interview data, perceptions and meanings of everyday mobility can be uncovered that would otherwise remain at a pre-reflexive level.