Reading, writing and systematic review
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 20 September 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 64 (1) , 104-110
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2008.04813.x
Abstract
Title. Reading, writing and systematic review. Aim. This paper offers a discussion of the reading and writing practices that define systematic review. Background. Although increasingly popular, systematic review has engendered a critique of the claims made for it as a more objective method for summing up research findings than other kinds of reviews. Discussion. An alternative understanding of systematic review is as a highly subjective, albeit disciplined, engagement between resisting readers and resistant texts. Reviewers of research exemplify the resisting reader when they exclude reports on grounds of relevance, quality, or methodological difference. Research reports exemplify resistant texts as they do not simply yield their findings, but rather must be made docile to review. These acts of resistance make systematic review possible, but challenge claims of its greater capacity to control bias. Conclusion. An understanding of the reading and writing practices that define systematic review still holds truth and objectivity as regulative ideals, but is aware of the reading and writing practices that both enable and challenge those ideals.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Making Sense of Qualitative and Quantitative Findings in Mixed Research Synthesis StudiesField Methods, 2008
- Using qualitative metasummary to synthesize qualitative and quantitative descriptive findingsResearch in Nursing & Health, 2007
- Literature Reviews of, and for, Educational Research: A Commentary on Boote and Beile’s “Scholars Before Researchers”Educational Researcher, 2006
- Comparability work and the management of difference in research synthesis studiesSocial Science & Medicine, 2006
- Digging for Nuggets: How ‘Bad’ Research Can Yield ‘Good’ EvidenceInternational Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2006
- Evidence-Based Medicine: Ambivalent Reading and the Clinical Recontextualization of ScienceHealth: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 2003
- Evaluating and synthesizing qualitative research: the need to develop a distinctive approachJournal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 2003
- How objective are systematic reviews? Differences between reviews on complementary medicineJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 2003
- Narrative Impressions of Literature: The Availability Bias and the Corrective Properties of Meta-Analytic ApproachesPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 2001
- To Be of Use: The Work of ReviewingReview of Educational Research, 1999