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fluent in Amharic, the language spoken in the regional capital Awassa, and in
two other regional languages (Kambatinya and Sidaminya)
spoken in some of
the zones in SNNPRS. The facts that both of them were based outside the
region and that the EPRDF and its affiliates are not the sole political actor in
the region, made the interpreters less afraid of going into controversial and
sensitive issues. Nevertheless, there were situations were the interpreters tried to
avoid difficult situations without my consent. One, rather amusing example is
when I asked one of the higher representatives of the local EPRDF party about
the informal structures of party evaluation, called
gimgimma.
The party cadre
was apparently surprised to get such a question and burst out in Amharic:
“Oh, she’s a dangerous woman!” The interpreter translated this to me as
“That was a good question!” and continued. He did not tell me the real
meaning until after the interview had ended.
One of the advantages ofthe use of interpretation was that it gave me some
flexibility during the interviews, it gave me time to think and write while the
informant was talking. My interpreters also provided me with research
assistance, giving me contextualised information about the local culture and the
sensitivity of certain topics.
Documents
The documents include statistics, public reports and legal codes.
Documentary
sources are, as literature and interviews, products of social and political
settings. They should not be accepted as literal records of happenings that have
taken place or neutral measurements of quantifiable conditions. Yin (1994:81)
suggests that the most important use of documents in case studies is to
corroborate and augment evidence from other sources. If the documentary
sources do not corroborate other sources, the researcher has a specific reason
to inquire further into the case. Documents should therefore not be seen as
findings in themselves, but should be used
to find clues for further
investigation. Below, I shall be examining the value of the statistics and public
reports that are used in my study. The legal codes are also examined as sources
of evidence. But they are normative rather than descriptive documents, and are
therefore not subjected to the same kind of scrutiny as the other documents.
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