Janice M. Morse

Janice Margaret Morse (née Hambleton, born 15 December 1945)in Blackburn, Lancs., UK to New Zealand parents. She is an anthropologist and nurse researcher who is best known as the founder and chief proponent of the field of qualitative health research.[1] She has taught in the United States and Canada. She received PhDs in transcultural nursing and in anthropology at the University of Utah, where she later held the Ida May “Dotty” Barnes and D Keith Barnes Presidential Endowed Chair in the College of Nursing at University of Utah,.[2] She is also an Emerita Distinguished Professor at the University of Utah and Professor Emerita at the University of Alberta. She is founder of three journals and created four scholarly book series on qualitative research. She was Founding Director of the International Institute of Qualitative Methodology at University of Alberta, the longest standing research institute on qualitative inquiry in the world.[3]

  1. ^ Morse, J. (2012) Qualitative Health Research: Creating a New Discipline. Walnut Creek CA: Left Coast (Routledge)
  2. ^ Janice Morse, University of Utah profile, https://faculty.utah.edu/u0556920-Janice_Morse_RN,_PhD,_FAAN/hm/index.hml
  3. ^ Morse, J. (2007). “Developing Qualitative Inquiry.” Qualitative Health Research 17 (5): 567-570. Doi: 10.1177/1049732307301611