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PARTICIPATION ACTION RESEARCH 1 INTRODUCTION TO PAR ONE-DAY TRAINING COURSE 21 st February 2014 [email protected]

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Page 1: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

PARTICIPATION ACTIONRESEARCH 1

INTRODUCTION TO PARONE-DAY TRAINING

COURSE

21st February 2014

[email protected]

Page 2: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

THE CENTRE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE AND COMMUNITY ACTIONA research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic

researches from a number of departments and community partners.

University-public engagement as a two-way dialogue.

It’s aim is to: Promote and develop research, teaching, public/community

engagement and staff development around the board theme of social justice

Provide a centre of excellence for theoretically informed participatory and community-based research; do not see ‘thinking’ or ‘theory’ as separate from ‘practice’, or Universities as the only place where thinking of theory happen.

Provide a locus for good practice in this type of research and associated initiatives in teaching, training, engagement and staff development.

Page 3: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

WHAT DOES PARTICIPATION MEAN?

Page 4: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH: A BRIEF HISTORY

Participatory research has evolved from: • Action research approaches from 1940s onwards,

e.g. Lewin• Radical pedagogy, e.g, Freire• Development practice, especially in lower income

countries

• It developed in reaction to exploitative and extractive research processes• Acronyms are multiplying…• (and their content and meaning: what processes,

ownership, political intent?)• PR, PA, PAR, PRA, PLA, RRA, RA, CBR, CBPR, FPAR,

TPAR……

Page 5: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

ORLANDO FALS-BORDER “Do not monopolize your knowledge nor impose

arrogantly your techniques but respect and combine your skills with the knowledge of the researched or grassroots communities, taking them as full partners and co-researchers.”

“Do not trust elitist versions of history and science which respond to dominant interests, but be receptive to counter-narratives and try to recapture them.”

“Do not depend solely on your culture to interpret facts, but recover local values, traits, beliefs, and arts for action by and with the research organizations.”

“Do not impose your own ponderous scientific style for communicating results, but diffuse and share what you have learned together with the people, in a manner, that is wholly understandable and even literary and pleasant, for science should not be necessarily a mystery nor a monopoly of experts and intellectuals.”

Page 6: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

Mainstreaming Originally grass roots activity, participatory

approaches have become “institutionalised” – taken up by large organisations

Danger where ‘participation’ becomes a buzzword and original intent is lost

“The new tyranny” (Cooke and Kothari 2001)Researchers often add Participatory to Action

Research in order to signal a political commitment, collaborative processes and participatory worldview (Reason and Bradbury 2006).

Page 7: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

WHEN TO USE PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH

Helpful in many research contexts Especially for groups of people who are

often excluded (from society / from research)

Problem-solving orientation Has some limitations and dangers.

Page 8: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

WHAT IS PARTICIPATORY ACTION RESEARCH? “a collaborative process of research, education and action

explicitly oriented towards social transformation”

(Kindon et al 2007)

“a radical challenge to the traditions of science…

it deliberately inverts who constructs research questions, designs, methods, interpretations and products…

researchers from the bottom of social hierarchies reposition as the architects of critical inquiry, contesting hierarchy and the distribution of resources, oppurtunities and the right to produce knowledge”

Page 9: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

PRINCIPLES OF PAR• Ownership of research by groups and communities

traditional can be seen as the ‘subjects’• Benefits of research for all of those involved • Collaboration between researchers and participants,

roles shared in problem definition, choice of methods, data analysis, use of findings.

• Democratic basis – embodies democratic ideals and principles

• “Empowerment” – through constructing and using our own knowledge

• Wholeness – worldview of ‘feel-thinkers’ (Ospina 2008)

Inevitably there are tensions and conflicts between realising different goals – producing knowledge; social empowerment; participant involvement, etc

Page 10: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

APPROACH VS METHODDoing research in a participatory way can

mean two things:1. As a METHOD:

Techniques of data collection and analysis The best known is diagramming

2. As an APPROACH:

All participants are involved in the whole research process

They share in deciding on questions, collecting data, doing analysis, interpreting findings, deciding on follow up action

Page 11: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

Today, PAR is both 1. methods and 2. approaches

more challenging if taken both as method and approach

Many researchers adopt 1. without 2.

The importance of clarity and honesty

Fierce critiques of participatory research exist, and it is important to be aware of the dangers / drawbacks

Page 12: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

EXAMPLES: PAR IN RIVER MANAGMENT(Rachel Pain, David Milledge, Geoff Whitman, Lune River trust)

• Growing demands in European and UK catchment legislation, for ‘participation’

• But inclusion of local people in river management tends to be superficial, tokenistic

• In general – physical science lots of catching up to do with social science in this area

Funder: ESRC (RELU programme)

Research questions: developed jointly by all participants once the research had started

Methodology:

A Participatory Action Research project with Lune Rivers Trust and 3 academics, using participatory mapping, diagramming, discussion groups, modelling, statical analysis

Page 13: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

R5 Well I find it with you know, with academics, they know, they’ve been to university, they’ve got their degrees, they’ve read this, they’ve studied that… and I just thought to come on something like this and not be patronised…

R6 They’ll come from, these people will come along from the Environment Agency and this, that and other, and they’ll say you do that, they haven’t a bloody, nor practical idea whatsoever.

R5 No.

R6 They won’t listen to you, they’ve read it in books and that’s what we come across and that comes regular and that’s what’s wrong with the country they don’t listen to the people enough.

Page 14: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

IDENTIFYING THE RESEARCH FOCUS Ripping up the research proposal… A ground-up process Used participatory diagramming to

brainstorm, rank, prioritise and decide focus

Took 4 meetings Needs steel nerves But then, lift off….all the ins/outs had been discussed,

everyone was engaged and ready to go

Page 15: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

METHODOLOGY Participatory diagramming to frame,

organise and make collective decisions For research on slurry risk – vegetation

surveys, modelling and mapping Using different skills and competencies

of the members, and learning Fieldwork and ‘ground-truthing’ Critique and re-orienting model

parameters

Page 16: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

THE SHARING OF EXPERTISE Knowledge production as a negotiated process – both

between academics and local people and between local people (contesting each others’ knowledges)

The scientific models became a product of the multiple knowledges of the group.

From this work, we questioned the terms ‘Expert/experts’ or redistributing expertise’- Because its underlying assumption is always that the academic/

scientist/ policymaker is the active partner who is benevolent and able to ‘empower’ local knowledge.

- With a desire and the conditions in place for real collaboration, this happens on both sides: knowledge circulates

Page 17: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

PARTICIPATORY TECHNIQUESA wide range of techniques may be used

in participatory research, including

Interviewing Observation Community surveys Diagramming Mapping Arts techniques, such as video,

photovoice, drama, storytelling

Page 18: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

WHY PARTICIPATORY DIAGRAMMING

An engaging method that encourages participation, inclusive of all abilities

Excellent for identifying and developing initial issues, or final solutions

Or as part of a long reflective/iterative process Or even used rapidly = large numbers of people Can be used with individuals or groups Often stimulates education, information exchange,

debate, understanding

Page 19: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

DEVELOPING PARTICIPATORY DIAGRAMSTypes of diagram

“Brainstorms” to raise issues and/or possible solutions

Maps showing who lives where, location of important local features and resources, movements in space

Flow diagrams to indicate linkages, sequences, causes, effects, problems and solutions

Timelines or calendars showing how activities, resources, workloads, health, wages, well-being etc vary

during the day/year

Matrices or grids, scored with sticky dots, counters, or post-its, to compare things, showing how conditions have changed

over time, or make decisions

There are many more… see handout, reading list and websites!

Page 20: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

USING OF PARTICIPATORY DIAGRAMS

Paper, coloured pens, sticky dots, post-its etc, used to work through a sequence of tools

With guidance of facilitator, group moves through a process: looking at current situation, identifying issues and problems, raising solutions

Emphasis on participants’ knowledge, ideas, contributions – direction of session

Observations, interviewing the diagram’, notes of group discussion = also data

Participants involves in verification and analysis, and acting on findings

Page 21: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

TRYING THE DIAGRAMS

In your group, choose a question…may be linked to your research

interests, or a current issue

Work through a diagram format chose from the examples on the handout.

Page 22: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

DIAGRAMMING AS RESEARCH METHOD

Advantages….

Route to a community view

Effective for accessing ‘hard to reach’ groups

Potentially wide coverage of population

Participants choose level of involvement

Group work is inclusive, and promotes information sharing and education

Limitations….

Romanticisation of ‘community’

Produces certain types of information

Information may be brief and superficial

Relationship with researcher may be very brief

Presence of others affects personal accounts

Page 23: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

Research is emergent and reflects people’s own priorities and interests

Can tailor tools to participants

Participants as experts in problem definition and solutions

Collective solutions emerge organically

Information may not address goals of research

Selective involvement of participants in verification and analysis

Unequal power and representation amongst participants, and between participants and researchers

Social and political factors can affect change to the detriment of the participants

Pain and Francis (2003)

Page 24: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

PARTICIPATION: THE NEW TYRANNY?

The critique:

Rather than empowering communities, participatory approaches often have negative effects

Producing participants as requiring research Whose idea was this research? Did you ask them?

Producing disciplined subjects as participants, expected to perform appropriately This is a ground up process… you are local people… so

get to it!!

Retaining researchers’ control whilst presenting themselves as benign Ignore me, I’m just the vehicle through which the

research passes

Page 25: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

Romanticising “local knowledge” You’re the experts… all we need to do is to tell the

rest of the world

Reinforcing power hierarchies in communities Who’s going to volunteer to

collate/represent/disseminate this?

Legitimising neo-liberal programmes and institutions Trust me, I’m from Durham University!

(Kindon et al, 2007)

Page 26: 21 st February 2014 rachel.pain@durham.ac.uk. A research centre based at Durham University, made up of academic researches from a number of departments

FINAL THOUGHTS… Participatory approaches are now widely used, and abused, in research

Too many “pollyanna” accounts of happy, successful, fulfilled participation, and neat models that are applied no matter what the context!

Participation does not depend on using a particular method, but is a process

Participation (and diagramming) did not evolve as a research method, but a means for education and action

Participatory Action Research emphasis ‘the action bit’

Participation always works out differently (and unexpectedly), influanced by context, place, people, politics, personalities, desires

Developing participatory ethics… Accountability, reciprocity, reflexivity, representation, dialogue Participants’ desires and views about the choice and governance of approach

See PAR 2:”Embedding participation in research practice (21st March)