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Lessons from conducting trans-national Internet-mediated participatory research with hidden populations of cannabis cultivators

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • Monica Barratt
  • Gary Potter
  • Marije Wouters
  • Chris Wilkins
  • Bernd Werse
  • Jussi Perälä
  • Michael Pedersen
  • Holly Nguyen
  • Aili Malm
  • Simon Lenton
  • Dirk Korf
  • Axel Klein
  • Julie Heyde
  • Pekka Hakkarainen
  • Vibeke Asmussen Frank
  • Tom Decorte
  • Thomas Blok
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>03/2015
<mark>Journal</mark>International Journal of Drug Policy
Issue number3
Volume26
Number of pages12
Pages (from-to)238-249
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Background
Internet-mediated research methods are increasingly used to access hidden populations. The International Cannabis Cultivation Questionnaire (ICCQ) is an online survey designed to facilitate international comparisons into the relatively under-researched but increasingly significant phenomenon of domestic cannabis cultivation. The Global Cannabis Cultivation Research Consortium has used the ICCQ to survey over 6000 cannabis cultivators across 11 countries. In this paper, we describe and reflect upon our methodological approach, focusing on the digital and traditional recruitment methods used to access this hidden population and the challenges of working across multiple countries, cultures and languages.

Methods
Descriptive statistics showing eligibility and completion rates and recruitment source by country of residence.

Results
Over three quarters of eligible respondents who were presented with the survey were included in the final sample of n = 6528. English-speaking countries expended more effort to recruit participants than non-English-speaking countries. The most effective recruitment modes were cannabis websites/groups (33%), Facebook (14%) and news articles (11%). While respondents recruited through news articles were older, growing practice variables were strikingly similar between these main recruitment modes.

Conclusion
Through this process, we learnt that there are trade-offs between hosting multiple surveys in each country vs. using one integrated database. We also found that although perceived anonymity is routinely assumed to be a benefit of using digital research methodologies, there are significant limits to research participant anonymity in the current era of mass digital surveillance, especially when the target group is particularly concerned about evading law enforcement. Finally, we list a number of specific recommendations for future researchers utilising Internet-mediated approaches to researching hidden populations.