ArticleAn Insider/Outsider Team Approach in Research With Migrant Farmworker WomenClingerman, Evelyn PhD, RNAuthor Information School of Nursing, The University of Texas at Austin. Corresponding author: Evelyn Clingerman, PhD, RN, School of Nursing, The University of Texas at Austin, 1700 Red River, Austin, TX 78701 (e-mail: [email protected]). Family & Community Health: January 2007 - Volume 30 - Issue - p S75-S84 Buy Abstract Investigators may encounter multiple and complex challenges in conducting research with underserved and marginalized groups. This article illustrates the benefits of using insider/outsider team research (IOTR) when researchers and their participants differ in gender, sexual orientation, culture, primary language, or social, economic, ethnic, or racial group membership. It also provides examples of how cognitively and experientially different perspectives enhanced understanding of participants' narratives. Drawing from the work of Bartunek and Lewis, which provided a conceptual basis for conducting IOTR, this article presents the historical background, characteristics, and phases of the IOTR concept and discusses how this research approach was implemented with a small-scale study of Mexican and Mexican American migrant farmworker women. Copyright © 2007 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved