I am currently working on a research project in a highly politically charged community. This research is ethnographic and requires building relationships with political organizations to understand how they are responding to specific revitalization strategies in their neighbourhood.
Now, the struggle for me is how to build said relationships with organizations/stakeholders that are in clear conflict with each other. This struggle is only further exacerbated by the fact that many people in the community do not hold "researchers" in high regard. They are seen (rightly so in many cases) as coming into the local area, taking the information they need out of the residents to get tenure, and not giving anything back. I also find this to be a reprehensible practice among researchers and normally try to enter into some kind of reciprocal relationship with informants - volunteering with their organization, helping to create usable policy briefs at the end of the project, and being as transparent as possible about my intentions.
However, in this project some of the more dogmatic groups aren't looking for volunteers - they have enough, and while other ways of working with them in a reciprocal relationship might be possible it would require me to take a role as much more of an advocate than a supporter. I worry that if I take on an advocate role it will alienate me from the other local community groups, and ultimately seem insincere and opaque as I am doing research here and not activism (I understand that those two positions aren't mutually exclusive, but a) they seem to be more acceptable when intertwined among prestigious professors and b) I'm not entirely sure I would be an activist for this particular organization even if I wasn’t doing research in their community.
Has anyone faced similar challenges? If so, how did you manage informant relations -- doing justice to the myriad of groups without alienating some in favour of others...?