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1. ‘I thought it would be tiny little one phrase that we said, in a huge big pile of papers’: children’s reflections on their involvement in participatory research.

2. Literary allusion in sociological analysis: Mass Observation mantelpiece reports as epic and drama.

4. Global crisis and research production: COVID-19 as shaper and shaker or micro-interruption?

5. Moving beyond 'shopping list' positionality: Using kitchen table reflexivity and in/visible tools to develop reflexive qualitative research.

6. Drawing as a method of researching social representations.

7. The continuum of rapport: Ethical tensions in qualitative interviews with vulnerable participants.

8. Who can you trust these days?: Dealing with imposter participants during online recruitment and data collection.

9. Mapping working practices as systems: An analytical model for visualising findings from an institutional ethnography.

10. Doing rural community-based action research (CBAR): Community perceptions and methodological impacts.

11. Temporal contextuality of agentic intersectional positionalities: Nuancing power relations in the ethnography of minority migrant women.

12. Starting with the archive: principles for prospective collaborative research.

13. Partisanship and positionality in qualitative research: Exploring the influences of the researcher's experiences of serious crime on the research process.

14. Imagining research together and working across divides: Arts-informed research about young people's (post) digital lives.

15. Diverse teams researching diversity: Negotiating identity, place and embodiment in qualitative research.

16. Translating (in) the margins: The dilemmas, ethics, and politics of a transnational feminist approach to translating in multilingual qualitative research.

17. Disturbing hierarchies. Sexual harassment and the politics of intimacy in fieldwork.

18. Methodological challenges in researching email consultations as a form of communication in patient-provider interactions.

19. Using WhatsApp for focus group discussions: ecological validity, inclusion and deliberation.

20. Qualitative research in crisis: A narrative-practice methodology to delve into the discourse and action of the unheard in the COVID-19 pandemic.

21. Why do people participate in research interviews? Participant orientations and ethical contracts in interviews with victims of interpersonal violence.

22. Student voices that resonate – Constructing composite narratives that represent students' classroom experiences.

23. Editorial.

25. Absence, multiplicity and the boundaries of research? Reflections on online asynchronous focus groups.

26. Hierarchy and inequality in research: Navigating the challenges of research in Ghana.

27. Everyday power dynamics and hierarchies in qualitative research: The role of humour in the field.

29. Obtaining individual narratives and moving to an intersubjective lived-experience description: a way of doing phenomenology.

30. Voice audio methods.

31. "He/his/she/her/father/mother/son/daughter": A critical reflection of reproductions of cis-normativity and cis-dominance in preparing qualitative data for analysis.

32. Fusion of horizons: Realizing a meaningful understanding in qualitative research.

33. Objects in focus groups: Materiality and shaping multicultural research encounters.

34. Instagram versus reality: the design and use of self-curated photo elicitation in a study exploring the construction of Scottish identity amongst personal style influencers on Instagram.

35. Young people engaging in event-based diaries: A reflection on the value of diary methods in higher education decision-making research.

36. A qualitative fallacy: Life trapped in interpretations and stories.

37. Participatory video from a distance: co-producing knowledge during the COVID-19 pandemic using smartphones.

38. Editorial.

39. Editorial.

40. Digital mapping as feminist method: critical reflections.

41. Overcoming Zeno's paradox: using long-exposure technology to capture a Deleuzo–Bergsonian perspective of movement in qualitative research.

42. 'All the world's a stage': Accounting for the dementia experience – insights from the IDEAL study.

43. The qualitative researcher: the flip side of the research encounter with vulnerable people.

44. Turning on the tap: the benefits of using 'real-life' vignettes in qualitative research interviews.

45. More-than-human methodologies in qualitative research: Listening to the Leafblower.

46. Rethinking the concept of 'subaltern-researcher': different D/deaf identities and communicative modalities as conflict factors in in-depth interviews.

47. A comparative method for themes saturation (CoMeTS) in qualitative interviews.

48. Looking at the 'field' through a Zoom lens: Methodological reflections on conducting online research during a global pandemic.

49. Reflexive practice in live sociology: lessons from researching Brexit in the lives of British citizens living in the EU-27.

50. 'He was obliged to seek refuge': an illustrative example of a cross-language interview analysis.