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“Being on both sides: covert ethnography and partisanship with bouncers in the night‐time economy”

David Calvey (Sociology, Manchester Metropolitan University, All Saints Campus, Manchester, UK)

Journal of Organizational Ethnography

ISSN: 2046-6749

Article publication date: 14 December 2020

Issue publication date: 22 March 2021

378

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to critically expose and explore “taking sides” in the context of a covert ethnography of bouncers in the night-time economy of Manchester, UK.

Design/methodology/approach

The methodology adopted is covert ethnography. The author reflects on the application and use of situated deception within an embedded and insider ethnography of bouncers, alongside other relevant covert ethnographies. Fieldwork vignettes are drawn upon to articulate the management of situated ethics and moral dilemmas.

Findings

The findings argue that bouncers are a deeply maligned occupational group, who perform a valuable regulatory role in the night-time economy. Moreover, a covert role ethnographic presents an interesting liminal stance of being on both sides, rather than a reductionist choosing of a single sides. Theoretically, phenomenological bracketing and ethnomethodological indifference are used to justify the position taken in the paper.

Research limitations/implications

Covert research has limitations around fieldwork time consumption, instigation tactics and “going native” distortion, alongside common fears of ethical belligerence and cavalier morals.

Practical implications

The lessons learnt, particularly for early career researchers, are about pursuing creative ethnographic methods.

Social implications

Occupationally, bouncers should be less demonized and more accessible to more women. This rather hyper-masculine domain should be disrupted and democratized.

Originality/value

The field is relatively niche, with a purist covert ethnographic approach being an innovative way to unpack it.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Thanks to my wife Julia Griffin for her supportive part in the project and to my late father Patrick Calvey for his engrossing tales of being a bouncer in the Docker's Club in Greenock, Scotland.

Citation

Calvey, D. (2021), "“Being on both sides: covert ethnography and partisanship with bouncers in the night‐time economy”", Journal of Organizational Ethnography, Vol. 10 No. 1, pp. 50-64. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOE-09-2020-0037

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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