ABSTRACT

Involvement of community partners in the structure and design of services is largely accepted in principle, but its practice is heavily contested. This book argues that the co-production of research is one of the best ways to involve community partners. As well as having intrinsic value in and of itself, research embeds a culture of learning, co-production and of valuing research within organizations. It also creates a mechanism for developing evidence for, monitoring and evaluating subsequent ideas and initiatives that arise from other co-production initiatives.

The book makes a case for research to be a synthesis of participatory research, critical pedagogy, peer research and community organizing. It develops a model called Participatory Pedagogic Impact Research (PPIR). Participatory research is often criticized for not having the impact it promises. PPIR ensures that the issues chosen, and the recommendations developed, serve the mutual self-interest of stakeholders, are realistic and realizable. At the same time this approach pushes the balance of power towards the oppressed using methods of dissemination that hold decision makers to account and create real change. PPIR also develops a robust method for creatively identifying issues, methods and analytic frameworks. Its third section details case studies across Europe and the United States of PPIR in action with professional researchers’ and community partners’ reflections on these experiences.

This book gives a unique articulation of what makes for genuinely critical reflective spaces, something underdeveloped in the literature. It should be considered essential reading for both participatory research academics and those involved in health and social care services in the planning, commissioning and delivery of services.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

The de-mystification and democratization of research

part 1|80 pages

The co-production of knowledge with community partners

chapter 1|17 pages

Emperor’s old clothes

Re-contesting the involvement of community partners

chapter 2|26 pages

The tyranny of tyrannical discourses

Debates and dilemmas within participatory research

chapter 3|15 pages

Peer research

Epistemological symbolism, proxy trust, conscious partiality and the near-peer

chapter 4|20 pages

PPIR’s key claim

Towards critical pedagogic reflective spaces

part 2|76 pages

Participatory Pedagogic Impact Research

chapter 5|12 pages

Meaningful organizational impact

Winning stakeholders over to the process

chapter 6|12 pages

Ethical considerations in PPIR

Negotiating power and position

chapter 7|13 pages

Defining your terrain

Community member and issue identification

chapter 8|12 pages

Methodology in action

Transforming participant knowledge

chapter 9|11 pages

Analysis and making recommendations

Grounding your data in community ways of knowing

chapter 10|15 pages

Dissemination and impact

Accounting for and privileging process

part 3|66 pages

Notes from the field

chapter 12|14 pages

Courage of our convictions

Participatory research in the criminal justice system

chapter 13|14 pages

The absent lens of the peer researcher

Reflections on and beyond a research project into youth violence

chapter 15|11 pages

Using Volunteer-Employed Photography

Seeing St David’s Peninsula through the eyes of locals and tourists

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion

Towards truly ethical co-productive research