Lovo, Etivina (2020) 6 COVID-19 research crisis management for a human research ethics research project in Fiji and Tonga. Researching in the Age of COVID-19: Volume III: Creativity and Ethics, 3. pp. 61-69.
My research project “Integrating indigenous principles of human research ethics: The case of two Pacific island nations” was in progress when the COVID-19 pandemic was declared in early 2020. It focuses on culturally appropriate and ethical human research in the Republic of the Fiji Islands (Fiji) and the Kingdom of Tonga (Tonga) in the South Pacific. Talanoa, an informal talk between persons or among people to share stories, ideas and emotions (Vaioleti, 2016), which is a culturally embedded qualitative research method, was employed (Nabobo-Baba, 2008; Fua, 2014; Fa’avae et al, 2016). COVID-19 enforced a change from face-to-face talanoa to online talanoa, presenting research and cultural challenges that had to be resolved in order to continue the study.
I, the principal investigator, am a Tongan woman and a long-term resident and worker in Fiji. We drew on a critical ethnographic theoretical perspective (Madison, 2011) to guide the enquiry, while a case study (Yin, 2009) qualitative research design was employed to explore priorities for the development of Human Research Ethics (HRE) in Fiji and Tonga. Two case studies were being conducted in this research project considering the incorporation of iTaukei (indigenous Fijian) cultural beliefs and traditions into the governance mechanism of HRE in Fiji. The second case study covers similar content, but in Tonga.
The ethno-geographic divisions of the Pacific Islands are Melanesia, Polynesia and Micronesia.