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Abstract

Members of the editorial board of Action Research responded to the question, `Why action research?' Based on their responses and the authors' own experiences as action researchers, this article examines common themes and commitments among action researchers as well as exploring areas of disagreement and important avenues for future exploration. We also use this opportunity to welcome readers of this new journal and to introduce them to members of the editorial board.
Why action research?
Mary Brydon-Miller
University of Cincinnati, USA
Davydd Greenwood
Cornell University, USA
Patricia Maguire
Western New Mexico University, USA
and members of the editorial board of Action Research
1
ABSTRACT
Members of the editorial board of Action Research responded to
the question, ‘Why action research?’ Based on their responses
and the authors’ own experiences as action researchers, this
article examines common themes and commitments among
action researchers as well as exploring areas of disagreement and
important avenues for future exploration. We also use this
opportunity to welcome readers of this new journal and to intro-
duce them to members of the editorial board.
Action Research
Volume 1(1): 11–30: 034201[1476-7503(200307)1:1]
Copyright© 2003 SAGE Publications
London, Thousand Oaks CA, New Delhi
www.sagepublications.co.uk
ARTICLE
KEY WORDS
action research
biography
commitment
ethics/morality
social change
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Welcome! The launch of this new journal marks an important achievement for all
of us who identify ourselves as action researchers. We hope that this journal will
serve, not only as a forum for the presentation of important innovations in the
theory and practice of action research, but as an open invitation to new scholars
and activists. For the inaugural issue, we have prepared this article to serve two
purposes. The first is to present some of the major issues and tensions currently
under discussion by those of us committed to the practice of action research. You
will see these questions repeatedly discussed, debated and disagreed about in the
pages of this journal. Our intention here is to begin to identify some of these
issues and to acknowledge both areas of commonality and of controversy among
action researchers.
Our second purpose is to introduce readers of Action Research to members
of the editorial board. Action research is not an impersonal practice and we want
you to know who we are, how we came to the practice of action research, and
what we stand for, both individually, and as a community. This article is built on
responses from members of the editorial board to the following query:
We’d like your thoughts on the ‘Why?’ question. Why do you choose to do action
research? What brought you to this practice? What keeps you involved? Do you
have particular stories that illustrate why you practice action research? What issues,
values, experiences, personal characteristics or other factors underlie your commit-
ment to action research and shape your practice?
We (Mary, Davydd and Pat) have taken the responses to that query, including
our own, and have identified some of the themes and concerns expressed by our
colleagues, as well as some of the unspoken issues we feel need to be addressed if
the practice of action research is to fulfill our hope for it to become a force for
social change both within and beyond academic settings. We are grateful to all of
those who were able to respond. We wish to acknowledge that, in attempting to
create this brief overview, we have not done justice to the diversity of experience
and the depth of insight reflected in the comments submitted to us by our col-
leagues. For this we apologize in advance and we hope that you, our readers, will
be inspired, intrigued or irritated enough by what you find here to seek out addi-
tional works by these scholars.
Defining action research
Action research, as defined by Peter Reason and Hilary Bradbury, is:
a participatory, democratic process concerned with developing practical knowing in
the pursuit of worthwhile human purposes, grounded in a participatory worldview
which we believe is emerging at this historical moment. It seeks to bring together
action and reflection, theory and practice, in participation with others, in the pursuit
Action Research 1(1)
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of practical solutions to issues of pressing concern to people, and more generally the
flourishing of individual persons and their communities. (2001, p. 1)
Action research has a complex history because it is not a single academic disci-
pline but an approach to research that has emerged over time from a broad range
of fields. There are strong elements of action research in the work of John Dewey,
both in his philosophical work and in his studies and experiments in education.
Action research perspectives can be found in the early labor-organizing traditions
both in the US and Europe, in the Catholic Action movement and in liberation
theology. Kurt Lewin brought an action research perspective to the US in the
1940s and succeeded for a time in making the notion of collaborative research
with stakeholders with a liberating intent a central interest of a broad range
of social scientists. The anthropologist, Sol Tax, founded what he called
‘action anthropology’ to promote both collaboration with local stakeholders and
democratization processes. The Tavistock Institute for Human Relations sup-
ported action research efforts combining the work of British, Norwegians and
Australians on work in both the UK and Scandinavia. This work has spread to
Sweden, Denmark and Germany. Myles Horton and his collaborators founded
Highlander in Tennessee to promote social justice, civil rights and democracy.
Paulo Freire, Budd Hall, Marja Liisa Swantz, Orlando Fals-Borda and others
developed and promoted an action research approach to oppression and institu-
tional change. Chris Argyris, Donald Schön, Reg Revans, William Torbert, Peter
Reason and John Heron promoted this kind of work in a wide variety of organi-
zations, ranging from private sector companies to public authorities.
As disparate as these traditions are, what links them is the key question of
how we go about generating knowledge that is both valid and vital to the well-
being of individuals, communities and for the promotion of larger-scale demo-
cratic social change. Action research challenges the claims of a positivistic view
of knowledge which holds that in order to be credible, research must remain
objective and value-free. Instead, we embrace the notion of knowledge as socially
constructed and, recognizing that all research is embedded within a system of
values and promotes some model of human interaction, we commit ourselves to
a form of research which challenges unjust and undemocratic economic, social
and political systems and practices.
Action research is a work in progress. As readers of this journal will dis-
cover, there are still many unanswered questions and many unresolved debates.
We invite you to join us and the many action research practitioners throughout
the world in shaping our practice, in defining our goals, in articulating the theo-
retical frameworks to support our work and in discovering ways in which our
shared commitment to social justice can be realized.
Brydon Miller et al Why action research?
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The journey to action research
The members of the editorial board reflect the diverse fields in which action
research has begun to have an influence, among them organization development,
anthropology, education, economics, psychology, sociology and management.
From the descriptions of the journey to action research we received from editorial
board members, it appears that many of us have one thing in common – our pro-
found dissatisfaction with where we were.
2
As Zuber-Skerritt and Farquhar
observed,
I was alone, but deep inside I could not accept that majority views must be right,
accepted or adhered to simply because of their majority status. I recognised that we
should not leave a paradigm unchallenged simply because it is dominant. (2002:
103)
Acting from this sense of dissatisfaction, we began our search for a new research
practice. But the road to action research was not clearly marked, especially for
those of us who have pioneered the re-emergence of this approach. Reflecting on
her entry into participatory action research over 35 years ago, Marja Liisa Swantz
recalls, ‘I had no knowledge or training in action research and the participatory
method I knew about was the anthropological participant observation. I found it
untenable. I mingled in the affairs of the community in many and varied ways.’
Similarly, Werner Fricke notes, ‘I had been studying economics and sociology at
several German universities. There was never a word about action research at the
university; it was unknown in German academia in the late sixties and seventies
even more than it is today.’ Bob Dick’s experience, or a variation on the theme, is
also familiar to many of us, ‘my early training was as an experimental psycholo-
gist. I wasn’t given even a hint of the existence of action research.’
Fortunately, tenacity is also something of a commonality. Bob goes on to
recall that, ‘some colleagues mentioned something called action research. Others
tried to dissuade me from even looking at it. “Not much action, and not much
research”, was how one of them characterized it. That was reason enough to
examine it for myself.’ Shankar Sankaran describes a similar experience and
acknowledges that following his first encounter with action research he ‘came
away very puzzled. Most of us were positivists brought up with a scientific
background.’ But further reading of action research brought him back to his
childhood heroes, ‘Gandhi and Nehru, whose democratic principles I admired a
lot.’ Shankar recalls how, ‘reading Lewin’s papers and hearing about some of the
AR stories kindled the free spirit that I had when I was younger although I was
much poorer. I started feeling more comfortable about action research.’
The struggle for congruency between our theories and practices is another
commonality among action researchers. Bill Torbert says it clearly – our practice
‘aims toward greater congruity between the values one espouses and the values
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one enacts’. Pat Maguire recalls how that very struggle in the early 1980s brought
her and others at the Center for International Education to participatory action
research. ‘We realized that our approaches to research and evaluation were in-
congruent with the values of the empowering, non-formal education we espoused
in our work outside the academy.’ After changing from being a laboratory-based
experimental psychologist to an educator, Bob Dick also felt the tension of incon-
gruity, ‘The research methods I knew well didn’t fit my new situation. Either I
found something else or I abandoned research altogether.’
In describing their journeys to action research members of the editorial
board cite a variety of influences, including Kurt Lewin, Paulo Freire, Thomas
Pettigrew, Chris Argyris, Gregory Bateson and John Dewey. But as important as
these fellow scholars have been, it is also clear that for many of us early political
activity, community development efforts and the inspiration of the people we’ve
met through these experiences have been the real impetus behind our dedication
to this work. Werner Fricke, for example, describes taking part in an investiga-
tion of Nazi-era judges in post-war West Germany; Victor Friedman recalls his
work as a young scholar in the Jewish community on an island off the coast of
Tunisia; Olav Eikeland relates his experience in a progressive high school; and L.
David Brown writes of his time as a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia as pivotal
in their development as action researchers. Through such experiences many of us
reached the same conclusion as Robin McTaggart. ‘What really is the purpose of
social research? The answer to this question to me now is quite straightforward:
the improvement of social practice.’
L. David Brown’s description of the journey captures what many of us seem
to feel.
I believe that many events in my work and life have been a matter of luck or acci-
dent. But I am also aware of several occasions on which I explicitly made choices to
step off the obvious path, and do something that others thought odd or worse. . . . I
have come to think of these events as ‘detours’ from the obvious career paths stretch-
ing before me. Frequently these detours have become the main road for me. There
are obvious costs to such detours. Other choices might have made me richer, more
influential, more famous, more productive, and so on. But I like what I am doing,
even though the path has involved a lot of wandering through uncharted territory.
A shared commitment to democratic social change
Action research rejects the notion of an objective, value-free approach to know-
ledge generation in favor of an explicitly political, socially engaged and demo-
cratic practice. John Shotter states it quite succinctly, ‘research into our ways of
life cannot be conducted in the same, value-free way as in the natural sciences.’
David Coghlan, describing the impact of Kurt Lewin’s work on his practice,
Brydon Miller et al Why action research?
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describes a basic tenet of action research, ‘the powerful notion that human sys-
tems could only be understood and changed if one involved the members of the
system in the inquiry process itself’.
A key value shared by action researchers, then, is this abiding respect for
people’s knowledge and for their ability to understand and address the issues con-
fronting them and their communities. Ernie Stringer reflects this position when he
suggests that our task should be to:
provide people with the support and resources to do things in ways that will fit their
own cultural context and their own lifestyles. The people, we knew, not the experts,
should be the ones to determine the nature and operations of the things that
affected their lives.
As Elizabeth Kasl suggests in writing with Lyle Yorks, it is by working in col-
laboration with others that we are able to achieve the most. They describe how in
their own community-based work, the participants ‘grew to appreciate how their
interrelatedness created a power greater than a sum of individual powers’ (2002,
p. 16).
Working collaboratively with others leads not only to community and
organizational changes, but also to personal changes in the action researcher. As
action researchers reflect on their experiences, they acknowledge being pro-
foundly changed by those experiences. Marja Liisa Swantz recalls a project with
50 students at the University of Dar Es Salaam that engaged student-researchers
directly with village youth and women cleaners.
In each case the researchers became involved in the problems of the people con-
cerned over a period of time. The research changed the attitudes of the students
radically and made the research mode a thorough educational process for the
villagers, students, and myself as a scholar.
Similarly, Elizabeth Kasl wrote, ‘From my experience as a participatory research
methods teacher and dissertation chair, I have second hand experience of witness-
ing the transformative power of participatory processes as launched by students
in course practicum projects and dissertation work.’
Action research, according to Werner Fricke, is:
empathy and listening while meeting the other, it is a commitment to basic values
like human creativity and democratic participation, it is based on the perception of
social reality as a continuing process with individuals being subjects of their history
and the social contexts they are dependent on.
He goes on to insist, we ‘cannot (and must not) avoid values and personal com-
mitment’.
These values require action. Knowledge comes from doing. Action
researchers feel compelled to act collectively on and with that knowledge. Hilary
Bradbury urges, ‘Action research must draw power from the premises of prag-
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matism, that belief that we can know through doing.’ She continues, ‘I realize I
am particularly comfortable with knowing through doing, as much, if not more
so, than knowing through conceptualization.’ Robin McTaggart reflects this
commitment to action in describing the difference between action research and
other forms of inquiry, ‘the crucial difference lies in the commitment of action
researchers to bring about change as part of the research act. Fundamental to
action research is the idea that the social world can only be understood by trying
to change it.’ Pat Maguire wrote, ‘I stay involved with action research because all
the theorizing in the world, feminist or otherwise, is of little use without the
doing. And action researchers are doers.’
A respect for people and for the knowledge and experience they bring to the
research process, a belief in the ability of democratic processes to achieve positive
social change, and a commitment to action, these are the basic values which
underlie our common practice as action researchers. Ian Hughes sums up how
many of us seem to feel:
I choose action research because I have a long standing commitment to developing
more effective strategies and methods to promote social justice. . . . I choose action
research because I believe in old fashioned virtues like compassion and truth. I know
this sounds corny, but it is real.
The integration of theory and practice
Many of us cite Kurt Lewin, who once observed, ‘there is nothing so practical as
a good theory’ (1951: 169), as a major influence on our work. But action research
goes beyond the notion that theory can inform practice, to a recognition that
theory can and should be generated through practice, and, as the earlier discus-
sion of values would suggest, that theory is really only useful insofar as it is put
in the service of a practice focused on achieving positive social change.
Werner Fricke recalls that his ‘entrance was research praxis, not theory’.
We think many action researchers would have to admit that they came to theory
largely as a way of justifying what they knew was correct to begin with; to legiti-
mize a politically informed and effective form of knowledge generated through
experience. We were able to justify our work as academics through reference to
theoretical frameworks challenging the dominant positivistic worldview of the
social sciences. Critical theory in particular made much of our work possible and
we draw upon many of the more recent theoretical frameworks to provide new
perspectives on our work. As Ortrun Zuber-Skerritt notes, theory provided the
insights needed for ‘effective intellectual argument’.
But having embraced critical theory, or feminism, or pragmatism, we began
to discover the ability of theory to frame issues of power and identity; to suggest
strategies for action and explanations for outcomes which had earlier left us
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puzzled; to provide structures within which our work could be better understood
and our practice improved. Theory provided a grounding for our attempts to take
the next step. L. David Brown describes his experience of trying to bring together
community activists and business leaders. After his first efforts ended in a weary
stalemate, Brown reconceptualized the process in terms of intergroup tensions
and power differences. The success of this second project ‘confirmed that both
practice and theory could benefit from combining action and research’.
Wrestling with this connection between theory and practice can provide an
intellectual challenge as well. Ernie Stringer notes that action research,
provides the impetus for me to continue to explore the academic and intellectual
roots of this tradition, enabling me to seek affirmation for my work in the post-
modern, feminist and critical theories that are, for me, the most significant discourse
in the academic world I inhabit.
In some cases, theory has led not only to a critique of conventional research prac-
tices, but to a much needed re-examination of our own practice. As Pat Maguire
recalls:
the juxtaposition of everyday activism in the women’s movement with theorizing
action research led me to feminist critiques of traditional social science research as
well as feminist critiques of international development assistance. It didn’t take long
to superimpose feminist critiques on participatory action research.
There is much work left to be done in adequately articulating strong theoretical
foundations for our work as action researchers. Olav Eikeland notes, ‘I think
most action research doesn’t understand itself in adequate ways, which often, but
not always, means that action researchers have better practices than theoretical
self-understandings.’
There is also work to be done in articulating inclusive theoretical founda-
tions that build more extensively on indigenous knowledge systems (see for exam-
ple Hermes, 1999; Smith, 1999), feminist theories (Brydon-Miller, Maguire &
McIntyre, in press; Morawski, 2001), postcolonial (Bhabha, 1994; McClintock,
Mufti & Shohat, 1997) or critical race theories (Crenshaw, Gotanda, Peller &
Thomas, 1995; Delgado & Stefancic, 2000; Parker, Deyhle & Villenas, 1999). It
is our hope that this journal may provide a forum for such conversations regard-
ing theory, and in doing so, might help to advance both the theory and practice
of action research.
Relationships for learning and action
Some contributors indicated that during their professional training at university,
they never heard of action research. Or, as Bob Dick’s earlier comment demon-
strates, if they did hear of action research, they were discouraged from exploring
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it. Others note that they were discouraged as scholars-in-training from combining
research and action. Mary Brydon-Miller wrote, ‘There are those who say that
direct action is not, nor should be, the responsibility of social scientists.’ She con-
tinues, ‘one graduate school advisor told me, “You can’t mix your politics and
your psychology.”’ To which she responded, ‘If I have to choose one, I’ll choose
my politics.’ Fortunately, action research provided a way to preserve both while
losing the advisor.
Still others note that their university-based doctoral training proved inade-
quate for the questions they grappled with and the challenges they faced in the
field. Through his PhD studies, Ernie Stringer ‘sought to understand how teachers
and school systems could provide appropriate and successful educational experi-
ences for Aboriginal children’. He continues, ‘By the early eighties, I came to
realize that all my expertise, the now diverse array of quantitative and qualitative
research tools I now had at my disposal, would fail to provide what I was seek-
ing.’
Despite the absence of action research from university curricula or faculty
discouragement, many of the editorial board contributors did indeed learn about
action research through other university faculty or students, as well as through
readings, and classes. It was during McTaggart’s move from teachers college to a
university setting, Deakin, that he was introduced to action through work with
Stephen Kemmis. In graduate school, Hilary Bradbury was introduced to action
research concepts by Bill Torbert, while Mary Brydon-Miller was ‘rescued from a
life of positivism’ by Peter Park. Despite Shankar Sankaran’s ‘puzzlement’ after
his initial introduction to action research in his PhD Program, he went on to com-
plete an action research doctorate supervised by Bob Dick and Alan Davies.
Shankar recalls, ‘My emancipatory spirit had been awakened and I started feeling
restless after I finished my doctorate. My world had been changed and I was look-
ing at it from different eyes.’
Indeed one of the themes that emerged from contributions is how critical it
is for us to create and sustain spaces in universities and training institutes through
which we support, nurture, and challenge action researchers. Through collegial
persistence over the years, many of the members of the editorial board have
contributed energetically to the development of university-based action research
programs or networks. These include such action research programs or networks
as: Deakin University School of Education; University of Bath Centre for Action
Research in Professional Practice; the Cornell Participatory Action Research
Network; Participatory Research in Asia; Southern Cross Institute of Action
Research; Case Western Reserve Department of Organizational Behavior; the
Leadership for Change executive program at Boston College (which brings
together faculty from the Lynch School of Education); the Carroll School of
Management and the Sociology Department, Boston University School of Man-
agement; Griffith University; the University of Sydney; and research groups such
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as Action Learning, Action Research and Process Management (ALARPM);
the UK-based Collaborative Action Research Network (CARN); the New
Zealand Action Research Network (NZARN); and the newly formed US-based
Community-based Research Network.
Our stories indicate that the mentoring and collegial sharing that many of
us have enjoyed with others has been crucial to our development as action
researchers and as human beings passionately concerned with injustices and
inequities. To paraphrase Elizabeth Kasl and Lyle York, we have developed and
learned ‘in relationship’. Many of us came to action research through our work
with indigenous people – Australian Aboriginals, American Indians, African
villagers – or those marginalized in more industrialized nations, such as the
elderly, people with disabilities and factory workers. Yet our voices as editorial
board members are disproportionately white, male and from industrialized
nations. In her response to the query which launched this article, Mary Brydon-
Miller quoted Wildman and Davis, ‘. . . to end subordination, one must first
recognize privilege’ (1996, p. 20).
Essentially, we editorial board members are a privileged group, functioning
in a gate-keeping capacity both as editors and in our university and institutional
affiliations. But our commitment to action research requires us, collectively and
individually, to reach and push beyond our comfort zones to truly diversify the
editorial board, in each volume of this journal, in our institutions, and in our
networks, formal and informal. We hope to turn the conventional gate-keeping
function into a door-opening function and to do so in a collaborative spirit with
those who are disseminating action research through other journals and book
series.
3
While we started out this article with an invitation and hope that new
action researchers would ‘join us’, it can certainly be intimidating to try to join
an ongoing network of academics and practitioners who have enjoyed various
relationships with each other over the years. Our challenge is to reach out.
Similarly, our challenge is to diversify the knowledge base of the field
that gets shared with newcomers. Editorial board member Yoland Wadsworth,
current President of ALARPM, recently came across an article that gave an
overview of action research. Skipping down to the reference list, which serves to
codify the legitimate knowledge of action research, she was appalled to find the
work of so few women action researchers. Yoland noted, ‘the life work of femi-
nist and women action researchers is being disappeared before our eyes’ (personal
communication). While many contributors to this article noted the influence of
pioneering ‘fellow’ action researchers, we have a collective responsibility to intro-
duce the next generation of action researchers, indeed ourselves, to the work of
the action researchers such as Alice McInytre, Ella Bell, Brinton Lykes, Yoland
Wadsworth, Judi Marshall, Michele Fine, Patti Lather, Ortrun Zuber-Skerrit,
Jean King, Penny Barnett, Jan Barnsley and Diana Ellis, Francesca Cancian, Irene
Guijt and Meera Kaul Shah, Korrie De Koning and Marion Martin, Renu
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Khanna, Susan Noffke and Marie Brennan, Britt-Marie Berge and Hildur Ve,
Sandra Hollingsworth, Patricia Hill Collins, Colleen Reid, Marie Mies, and
Marja Liisa Swantz, who is credited with coining the term ‘participatory
research’. There are so many others.
Action researchers as educators
In our roles as academics or facilitators, many of us have found that the road to
action research also required changes in our teaching practices. Ernie Stringer
notes,
Enacting participatory approaches requires me to take quite a different stance to my
work. I now realize the necessity to thoughtfully engage in practices that involve
changes in relationship, positioning, authority, and knowledge production practices.
As a teacher, researcher or professional practitioner, I am a changed person.
Many contributors wrote of the various ways that they incorporate democratic,
participatory, and experiential methods into their university action research
classes, cognizant of the need for congruency in teaching about action research
through active, reflective, and relational practices (David Coghlan, Elizabeth Kasl
and Lyle Yorks, Bill Torbert and Dawn Chandler, Marja Liisa Swantz, Davydd
Greenwood). Bob Dick writes about the dialectical relationship between teaching
about action research and engaging in action research on our teaching practices.
‘When I began to build regular monitoring and reflection into my university
classes, they began to improve noticeably. . . . As my educational skills improved,
so did my action research. As my action research was refined, so were my educa-
tional skills.’
It’s a good thing that tenacity seems to be a shared trait among action
researchers. While action research is enjoying a period of expanded legitimacy,
we have to be tenacious in advancing the practices. Although Marja Liisa Swantz
wrote about a Tanzanian project which took place many years ago, the dynamics
are similar to those faced in using participatory processes in development con-
texts today. ‘Ministries and the district offices were not ready to make use of the
benefits of the study. It became clear to me that there must be institutional pre-
paredness to act on the basis of the results gained at the community level.’ She
continues, ‘I am perplexed that after all the work done with PAR and the evident
successes in using it, the main-line social scientists still largely ignore it.’
Werner Fricke, in writing of the isolation experienced trying to advance
action research in the German trade unions observes,
We all know the great difficulties action researchers face to bridge the two worlds of
theory and praxis, but if they try to avoid these difficulties, they will be reduced to
either consultants or academic scientists. In both roles they are missing the social
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function of action research: to enhance democratic participation and to create
public spaces in [the] economy.
The world of heretics
We all can, and must, do our part to contribute to the goal of achieving greater
social justice and each of us brings a unique set of experiences and talents to the
task. But even given the diversity of disciplines, locations and perspectives, there
do seem to be certain characteristics common to many of us currently engaged in
this practice. For one thing, we’re basically a hybrid of scholar/activist in which
neither role takes precedence. Our academic work takes place within and is made
possible by our political commitments and we draw on our experience as com-
munity activists and organizers to inform our scholarship.
In general, we don’t do well with boundaries, witness the interdisciplinary
nature of our editorial board and the broad range of influences cited by con-
tributors. In addition, as the story of our journeys to action research suggests, on
the whole those of us who define ourselves as action researchers are not the
world’s greatest rule-followers. As Robin McTaggart puts it, ‘Welcome to the
world of the heretics!’
On the other hand, we do tend to be practical and concerned with achiev-
ing real outcomes with real people. Hilary Bradbury speaks for many of us when
she notes, ‘it’s more satisfying for me to help create desired change, rather than
merely observe life go by.’ L. David Brown suggests how we bridge these two
inclinations, ‘I learned to be a maverick early, but I like to be a maverick with
influence.’
It helps to be patient. Building trust in communities that have every reason
to be wary of outsiders and especially of academic outsiders doing research is a
long-term project. Jim Kelly describes the 10 years he and his students dedicated
to working with African-American community leaders in Chicago on the
Developing Communities Project (Kelly, Azelton, Lardon, Mock & Tandon, in
press), but the impact of the project on the community and the richness of the
insights generated in their work together are testament to the value of such
patience.
We also tend to be optimistic. We believe in the possibility of change, ‘sur-
prising changes . . . changes that happen unexpectedly, changes that strike us with
amazement and wonder’, as John Shotter describes it. And we continue to believe
in the potential for change, often despite years of fighting battles within our insti-
tutions and communities that might deter a less determined soul. We take joy in
what we do (mostly) and we even tend to like one another! Ian Hughes observed,
‘action researchers are a friendly and supportive community,’ and Hilary Brad-
bury concurs, noting, ‘all of my best friends are action researchers.’
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The beauty of chaos
It also helps to be able to handle a certain degree of chaos, uncertainty and messi-
ness. As Victor Friedman put it, it helps to have ‘a preference for learning from
experience and especially from engaging uncertainty/complexity’. You have to be
willing to be wrong, to trust that other people know their own lives and their own
interests better than you do. This comes hard to those of us who have been
trained to believe that we are smarter than everyone else.
Russell Ackoff’s term ‘messes’ sums up one of the ways a great many action
researchers differ from their conventional social science colleagues. Messes are
complex, multi-dimensional, intractable, dynamic problems that can only be
partially addressed and partially resolved. Yet most action researchers have disci-
plined themselves to believe that messes can be attractive and even exciting. We
try not to avoid messy situations despite knowing that we do not have the ‘magic
bullet’ because we believe that, together with legitimate community stakeholders,
we can do something to improve the situation.
Just how action researchers come to have this way of living in the world is
not at all clear. Nearly all of us have conventional disciplinary training built on a
Fordist division of intellectual labor, hermetic professional hierarchies and disci-
plinary peer control systems of ranking and reward. No way of organizing intel-
lectual life could be more antithetical to engagement with messes because messes
require the recognition of the limitations and weaknesses of single discipline
knowledge systems and methods and engage us in collaboration, not only with
other disciplines, but with non-academic partners.
Some of this emerges directly from ethical and political commitments. As
convenient as Fordism is, it makes it impossible to address any significant social
issue. Those action researchers committed to social change necessarily have to
deal with messes; we are forced to follow the problems wherever they take us, and
the best among us learn the theories, methods and processes we need along the
way. Whatever our uncertainties, we seem to tolerate them because we are com-
mitted to changing the world in some positive way.
Another element of this is a kind of fundamental sociability that shines
through in all the contributions from the editorial board members. Many action
researchers find joy in being with others, in working passionately in groups, in
brainstorming, in struggling together. Through experience, we have learned that
it is not reasonable to try to be alone in our work. Again, the contrast with the
isolated disciplinary scholastic hero with 20 books, hundreds of articles and a
solitary life is sharp.
There is a clear legacy of pragmatism and feminism that helps explain our
penchant for messes. As a group, we seem unable to resist ‘embodied’ intellectual
practice. We never leave our corporeality; we are engaged in ongoing cycles of
reflection and action in which our bodies and ourselves and those of our collabo-
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rators are not only present to us but essential to the very process of understand-
ing messes. Pain, joy, fear, bravery, love, rage – all are present in our action
research lives.
There may also be a kind of ‘aesthetic’ at work in action research that wel-
comes complexity, uncertainty and struggle as energizing and filled with possi-
bility. We seem to tolerate paradoxes and puzzles and to survive them through a
sense of their beauty and some kind of sense of humor as well. When non-action
research colleagues greet us with fear and hostility, we probably should attribute
some of this defensive reaction to their sense that we have a worldview that is too
dynamic, too unstable and too chaotic to be acceptable.
Of course, our community has its share of less dynamic participants.
Personal uncertainties, weaknesses in research training, poor writing skills and
other defects are also with us and we need to work hard as networks to improve
both the quality of action research and the ongoing training of those with a will
to improve their own practices.
Facing the challenges of change
Robin McTaggart’s answer to his question, ‘What really is the purpose of social
research?’ was ‘the improvement of a social practice’. As action researchers, what
are some of the challenges we face in improving our action research practices,
individually and collectively?
Perhaps one of the first challenges is tackling and changing or improving
the places within which many of us practice. Many action researchers do not have
university affiliations. Indeed a few would actively reject them. But on the whole,
most editorial board members are affiliated with universities and research insti-
tutes. There can be no question that universities are a key institution for teaching
about, conducting and publishing action research. The editorial board’s personal
stories are almost always of personal transformation into action researchers after
a long period of unsatisfying university training or work. This path does not
recommend itself as a way of promoting action research. We cannot be content to
permit universities to continue to train most social scientists out of their values
and social engagements and then try to convert them later into action researchers.
To paraphrase Jill Morawski’s challenge to feminist scientists, our task is to con-
tinue to ‘modify the near environment’ (2001, p. 68) in which we conduct our
action research, learn, teach and evaluate our efforts.
We cannot do this from a position of arrogance and, unfortunately, in
response to the arrogance of the disengaged positivists, against whom we rou-
tinely rail, we often place ourselves on a moral high ground that blocks genuine
and direct dialogue with the very colleagues we should be challenging.
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Given this, our collective near silence on universities as institutions and why
action research has a hard time prospering in them is concerning.
4
We should
take up the challenge to develop and articulate an analysis of the dynamics that
make universities as institutions behave as they do. Only then can we develop
practical strategies and mechanisms for transforming universities into real learn-
ing institutions at the service of the communities in which they are situated.
This means adopting conscious pedagogies of action research and further-
ing the crisis into which the conventional social sciences have fallen. At present,
abstract economics, sociology, political science, psychology and anthropology are
largely socially disengaged and self-referential. While they are being supplanted
by management studies, organizational behavior, human resource management,
program evaluation, and so on – all fields with more regular extra-university
social contacts – this is not leading to the re-emergence of action research. Rather,
the ‘new’ social sciences are being looked at by university administrations as
entrepreneurial centers of research revenue generation and the ‘old’ social sci-
ences are losing ground to them. At the end of the day, the corporate entrepre-
neurial university of the 21st century will certainly be more socially connected but
its connection is likely to be mainly through competition in the neo-liberal global
market. Action research, with its multi-college, multi-disciplinary, critical view,
may be the last source of resistance to this process and the source of a renewed
university–society relationship. But this will only happen if we take on the uni-
versities as they are. It is one thing to be a ‘heretic’ and another thing to accept
this as a desirable status for action research.
Davydd vividly remembers our late friend and colleague, Donald Schön, at
the end of a wonderful workshop day in which all had outdone themselves being
smart and collaborative, saying, ‘If we are so smart, why did action research die
in universities?’ He went on to say that he did not want to be right and defeated
again.
To live up to Don’s challenge, however, requires an effort that most action
researchers in a position to do so are not yet making – beyond the paradigm
clarifications, the critiques of positivism, the ethical exhortations – an effort to
understand and change the conditions that continue to produce undemocratic
and disengaged social research and increasingly neo-liberal universities and insti-
tutions.
5
It is not enough to be right and comfortably better than others; if we really
believe what we say about action research, then we have to bend our efforts to the
comprehensive reform of universities because they are institutions with so much
power and so many resources that ignoring them means that we are likely to live
out Don’s fear of being right and defeated again.
While action researchers situated within university settings may be having a
rough time getting our message about action research heard in university forums,
we do seem to have had a modicum of success impacting international develop-
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ment assistance or donor agencies and NGOs (Gaventa & Cornwall, 2001; Guijt
& Shah, 1998; Wilson & Whitmore, 2000). Many editorial board members have
been working for years bringing participatory action research, evaluation and
learning approaches to international development work. Indeed, there are close
relationships between our work through universities and development agencies
and NGOs at the international, national and local levels. University faculty and
personnel have provided leadership and expertise in project partnerships with
international and community development agencies to address capacity-building
for sustainable development and poverty reduction. From the World Bank to
United Nations agencies to a range of NGOs, increasingly, ‘participation’ has
become a required component of evaluation, assessment, appraisals, training and
research projects. This causes us both celebration and serious caution. On the one
hand, action research is being legitimized as a useful strategic tool to include com-
munity people in addressing the critical issues of their lives. Participatory
approaches to research, evaluation, appraisal and training are being promoted as
part of a complex counter to the ‘dismal failure of the past several decades of
world “development” efforts in improving the conditions of the poor’ (Wilson &
Whitmore, 2000, p.104). On the other hand, as these participatory processes
have been scaled up and integrated into development policy initiatives at many
levels, action researchers are called to resist co-optation and reinforcement of
existing power relations (Gaventa & Cornwall, 2001). Just as the corporate
university’s social connection is mainly through competition in the neo-liberal
global market, development practitioners who promote action research must
continue to promote dialogue on how best to mount a meaningful challenge to
the neo-liberal global development enterprise. Who actually participates and for
whose purposes? Whose practices are targeted for improvement? How are
inequitable power relations actually unsettled and rearranged?
While promoting participatory and action-oriented processes in the field,
many development agencies remain hierarchical, rigid institutions with little sense
of how to operate democratically and inclusively. Hence the challenges of ‘scaling
up’ participatory, action-oriented processes for social justice and meaningful
change are similar whether we work in and through universities or development
agencies. Although we seem to have had more success promoting participatory
processes and action research in development assistance agencies, there is still
extensive work to do to help create attitudes, skills and processes that truly
challenge and unsettle deeply entrenched power relationships and interests that
resist meaningful democratization. The need to intervene and ‘modify the near
environment’ of development agencies and NGOs is surely as acute as in the uni-
versities. To paraphrase Geoff Mead (2002), these institutions have been good at
‘activating their immune responses’ to the values and practices of action research.
The potential contributions of action research to social change are limited if
we are a marginal force within universities, yet the challenges of scaling up, a
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measure of the acceptance of action research in the development arena, are
equally daunting.
One of the weaknesses of action research is its localism and the difficulty
we find in intervening in large-scale social change efforts. The bulk of action
research takes place on a case by case basis, often doing great good in a local
situation but then failing to extend beyond that local context. For quite some
time, practitioners like Björn Gustavsen, Werner Fricke and Morten Levin have
been struggling with the construction of broader, societal-level action research
initiatives where the local interventions are part of larger-scale networks and
social change strategies. Absent such broader social change strategies and com-
mitments, action research is likely to win local skirmishes but not the bigger
social battles that face us all. How should action research address problems such
as war and peace, environmental degradation and a world increasingly hostile to
the poor and powerless?
But action research is not merely about ‘doing good’, it is also about doing
things well. One of the tenets of action research is that research that is conducted
without a collaborative relationship with the relevant stakeholders is likely to
be incompetent. The respect action researchers have for the complexity of local
situations and for the knowledge people gain in the processes of everyday life
makes it impossible for us to ignore what the ‘people’ think and want.
From this initial respect, based on both democratic and empirical princi-
ples, action research moves on to the affirmation that action research is much
more able to produce ‘valid’ results than ordinary or conventional social science.
This is because expert research knowledge and local knowledges are combined
and because the interpretation of the results and the design of actions based on
those results involve those best positioned to understand the processes: the local
stakeholders. Further, action research meets criteria of validity testing more
effectively than do most other forms of social research. Action research projects
test knowledge in action and those who do the testing are the interested parties
for whom a base result is a personal problem. Action research meets the test of
action, something generally not true of other forms of social research.
Conventional researchers worry about objectivity, distance and controls.
Action researchers worry about relevance, social change and validity tested in
action by the most at risk stakeholders.
Many of the editorial board members appear confident that action research
has somehow survived and is more prominent now than it has been for a genera-
tion or two. The inaugural issue of this journal supports that contention. We
must however initiate more inquiry to explain why this new prominence has
happened and what can be done to sustain and expand it with integrity. With
increased legitimacy comes the challenge to maintain connections to our radical
roots. Our hope is that as readers and contributors to this journal, you will keep
our feet to that fire.
Brydon Miller et al Why action research?
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Notes
1 We would like to thank the following members of the editorial board for their
contributions: Hilary Bradbury, L. David Brown, David Coghlan, Bob Dick,
Olav Eikeland, Werner Fricke, Victor Friedman, Ian Hughes, Elizabeth Kasl,
James Kelly, James Ludema, Robin McTaggart, Peter Reason, John Shotter,
Ernie Stringer, Shankar Sankaran, Marja Liisa Swantz, Bill Torbert and Ortrun
Zuber-Skerritt. We would also like to thank Mary’s students Cassandra Bolden,
Beverly Eby and Steve Kroeger for their helpful comments on an earlier draft of
this article. Unless otherwise noted, quotations are drawn from unpublished
responses to our query.
2 We wish to thank Mary’s colleague Lanthan Camblin for this insight. As he
observed, ‘Wherever they are isn’t giving them what they want.’ Quite right!
3 Among the action research publication and dissemination networks with which
we hope to collaborate are the journals Concepts and Transformation, Systemic
Practice and Action Research, Convergence, Action Research International,
Human Relations and the book series, Dialogues on Work and Innovation. We
expect our efforts to be collaborative in the worldwide promotion of action
research.
4 A recent volume that addresses this issue very directly is Francine Sherman and
William Torbert’s Transforming social inquiry, transforming social action: New
paradigms for crossing thetheory/practice divide in universities and communities
(2000).
5 Davydd has written a very critical review of the failings of action research re-
cently, which is published in Concepts and Transformation (Greenwood, 2002)
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Mary Brydon-Miller is on the faculty of Educational Foundations and Urban
Educational Leadership in the College of Education at the University of Cincinnati.
She is co-editor (with Deborah Tolman) of From Subjects to Subjectivities: A Hand-
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Canada. Correspondence regarding this article can be addressed to Mary Brydon-
Miller, Educational Foundations, Mail Location 0002, College of Education, Univers-
ity of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, 45221 or to Mary.Brydon-Miller@uc.edu
Davydd J. Greenwood is the Goldwin Smith Professor of Anthropology and
Director of the Institute for European Studies at Cornell University where he has
served as a faculty member since 1970. He has been elected a Corresponding
Member of the Spanish Royal Academy of Moral and Political Sciences. He served as
the John S. Knight Professor and Director of the Mario Einaudi Center for 10 years
and was President of the Association of International Education Administrators. He
also has served as a program evaluator for many universities and for the National
Foreign Language Centre. His work centres on action research, political economy,
ethnic conflict, community and regional development, and the anthropological
study of contemporary universities.
Patricia Maguire is the Chairperson of the Western New Mexico University, Gallup
Graduate Studies Center in Gallup, New Mexico. Her interests include educator
action research and equity issues.
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... While the internalization of oppression ultimately exists internally, it is not an individual problem but rather a reflection on the individual level of a systemic issue. We used a critical trans lens to promote cognitive restructuring within action research to address oppression as the cause of internalization, instead of positioning negative core beliefs as the reason non-binary people internalize their oppressors (Brydon-Miller et al., 2003;Clark, 2013). ...
... While the current study aims to capture how non-binary people process SOEs, using the process chart tool also has important implications for psychologists wishing to intervene against discrimination and harassment experiences with their non-binary clients. Additionally, combining research and practice to intervene in the cycle of oppression can aid in promoting liberation for non-binary people rather than simply studying the phenomenon and making post hoc recommendations (Avison et al., 1999;Brydon-Miller et al., 2003). By using methodology as intervention, we take a clear stance in promoting justice by empowering non-binary people to be their own nexus of change while reducing self-blame and internalization of SOEs. ...
... Moss described the process chart as "sometimes a little difficult, but it was oddly cathartic and just like goodfreeing. " Experiencing the process chart as "freeing" or mutually beneficial is a core goal of action research (Brydon-Miller et al., 2003). Those who explained that it was helpful emphasized "seeing it like written out and breaking down my experiences in language, was really helpful" (Jessi). ...
... The second key element of AR is the goal of promoting the development of people in an organization and obtaining and applying practical knowledge (Brydon-Miller et al., 2003;Dick & Greenwood, 2015;Heron & Reason, 2001). According to Heron and Reason (2001), AR is preferably transformative in nature, focusing on social change to improve a situation, process, or personal skills and competencies. ...
... Learning and understanding by participants are central to AR (Dick & Greenwood, 2015). The knowledge generated through the research will contribute to the well-being of individuals, organizations, and communities (Brydon-Miller et al., 2003;Dick & Greenwood, 2015). Knowledge of an organization comes from the effort to change it, or, as Brydon-Miller et al. (2003, p. 14) have stated, "knowledge comes from doing." ...
... The third key element of AR is that people other than scientific researcher(s) will be involved in a collaborative manner (Brydon-Miller et al., 2003;Eden & Huxham, 1996;Heron & Reason, 2001). AR describes research with individuals rather than on individuals. ...
Thesis
Full-text available
Organizations are increasingly involving stakeholder interests in their decision-making processes based on the belief that this contributes to long-term value creation. They use different approaches, with only a few giving their stakeholders a say in decision-making. Organizations lack guidance from the literature in developing their stakeholder approaches. Both the disciplines of strategic management and business ethics lack a practically applicable approach in which ethical and economic interests are brought together equally and simultaneously in decision-making. This research focuses on developing an integrated stakeholder approach in which these interests converge, yet in which stakeholders also make joint considerations about which interests can be realized in the organizational context, and to what extent. A connection was sought with discourse ethics to add steering power and control by stakeholders to bring stakeholders together for decision-making in the stakeholder approach. The approach has a stakeholder-centric orientation, with a network of stakeholder relationships, a communicative space, in which they jointly decide on purpose, vision, objectives, and values. The main research question of the research is “At the enterprise level, how can an integrated stakeholder approach be designed that creates a space in which stakeholders are involved in decision-making with respect for each other's equality and aimed at achieving consensus?” Sub-research questions are to what extent elements of contemporary stakeholder approaches can come together in the integrated stakeholder approach, and what role discourse ethics plays in developing these elements into a consistent approach. The practical applicability of the stakeholder approach is an important prerequisite to be valuable to organizations. The research methodology action research has been applied, especially the collaborative management research modality. This modality was further developed in this research to align with the foundation of the integrated stakeholder approach: together with stakeholders, based on equality, and focused on consensus. Together with the management and stakeholders of a large cooperative funeral insurance and services organization, their integrated stakeholder approach was developed. This was done through a stakeholder dialogue that consisted of three action-reflection cycles. At the end of each cycle, evaluation and reflection took place which led to interventions in the stakeholder approach. The final result of the empirical research is a stakeholder approach that can be applied in the organizational context. The entire research process was conducted with stakeholders some of whom participated in the steering research team. Overall, the study shows that stakeholders granted legitimacy to each other based on their motivation for participating in the dialogue, recognizing both ethical and economic interests. During the dialogue, stakeholders were equally involved in deliberation and decision-making. A neutral moderator was necessary for everyone to participate equally in line with the requirements for deliberation and the participatory process as derived from discourse ethics. A stakeholder-centric orientation with a communicative space supports the premise that stakeholders are the ultimate beneficiaries of the organization. Securing communicative space as a formal tool for stakeholder engagement and its outcomes must be regulated, either by legislation or by the organization. One challenge is getting all legitimate stakeholders involved. In this study, some stakeholder groups remained unrepresented. The study deviated from the initial model for an integrated stakeholder approach where anyone with a legitimate interest could participate. The group size for an effective dialogue and a balanced distribution among the different stakeholder interests proved to be decisive factors for composing the dialogue group. The research result is a practically applicable integrated stakeholder approach. The initial model for collaborative stakeholder research was modified at several points to fit the practical development of a stakeholder approach. In addition to shifting components between distinct stages, two adjustments led to the final model. These are the development of a collaborative setting throughout the research period and the integration of action-reflection cycles in the implementation phase. With these, an approach is developed that can be applied to research on stakeholder issues.
... Action research is a personal endeavour that affects and supports the individual and the community at large (Brydon-Miller et al., 2003). As such, engaging in AR has translated into gains for my department, colleagues, students, and me. ...
... Before, during, and after engaging in AR projects, I recommend teacher-researchers consider the following questions: Brydon-Miller, M., Greenwood, D., & Maguire, P. (2003). Why action research? ...
Chapter
Full-text available
Over three decades ago, Richards (1987) posited that ‘research or theory which deals with the nature of second language teaching per se is scant in our professional literature’ (p. 210). Although the field has experienced a blossoming of research since then exploring issues connected to language teaching and learning, the reality is that research conducted by teachers (i.e., teacher research), such as action research (AR), remains a minority activity to this day (Borg, 2013; Dikilitaş & Mumford, 2016). More specifically, even though AR has become increasingly common in lan- guage education (Banegas & Consoli, 2019; Burns, 2010), academic gatekeepers continue to resist acknowledging its legitimacy, leading to fewer AR studies being published in the field – especially in top-tier journals. In this chapter, I provide an overview and reflect on the AR studies I have engaged in as a lan- guage teacher in K-12 and at the university level, as well as a language teacher educator in Poland and the United States. Also, I discuss, in practical terms, specific lessons learned from these AR studies for my teaching practice and scholarship. Keeping in mind the potential of AR as a tool for professional development in language classrooms (Pentón Herrera, 2018), I encourage readers to consider it in their practice by critically reflecting on my own experiences with conducting and publishing AR studies. I end the chapter with a brief overview of ongoing engagements in AR studies that I am conducting in Poland and the United States, and a call for the field of language education field to become more embracive of AR in practice and in research publications.
... Using a Participatory Research Approach, Yawardani Jan-ga will be qualitatively led in its evaluation and instrument development activities [102,128,129]. Inherent in the Participatory Research Approach is that participants are not simply considered subjects from whom data are collected; the focus is not on collecting clearly defined outcomes or outputs. ...
... Inherent in the Participatory Research Approach is that participants are not simply considered subjects from whom data are collected; the focus is not on collecting clearly defined outcomes or outputs. Rather, participants, their families, and the community are considered active research agents in the research process who possess valuable knowledge and experiences to offer Yawardani Jan-ga on the expression, experience, manifestations and consequences of poor SEWB and life skills in the communities in which they live [102,128,129]. ...
Article
Full-text available
Australian Aboriginal people experience stressors from inequalities across crucial social determinants, including deep and entrenched disadvantage and exclusion. The impact of unaddressed historical issues is pervasive and intergenerational. The disproportionate rates of Aboriginal youth suicide, juvenile detention and imprisonment highlight the inadequacy of existing social and emotional wellbeing programs and services for Aboriginal children and young people. There is increasing recognition in Australia that aligning social and emotional wellbeing interventions with Western values and conceptions of mental health is one of the main barriers to service uptake among Aboriginal people. This suggests fundamental questions remain unanswered about what type of services effectively address the complex constellation of social-emotional and wellbeing challenges arising from intergenerational poverty and trauma. Yawardani Jan-ga is an Aboriginal-led, operated, culturally secure, Equine-Assisted Learning (EAL) project designed by and with local Aboriginal young people, community Elders, members, and experts to address the complex constellation of social-emotional, spiritual and wellbeing needs of Aboriginal children and young people, aged 6–26 years, across multiple communities in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. EAL is a strengths-based learning approach where participants work with horses’ inherent characteristics to learn transferable life skills, such as communication skills, self-awareness, and emotional regulation, to promote social and emotional growth and wellbeing. Although EAL has been previously used with Aboriginal children and young people internationally, they are yet to be widely used with Aboriginal people in Australia. Here, we describe the three subcomponents of the Yawardani Jan-ga implementation science project and the planned Participatory Action Research and phenomenological approaches to capture the distinctive experiences of participants and the local communities where the intervention is implemented. We anticipate that findings will build an evidence base that informs policy and practice by understanding key intervention elements of social and emotional wellbeing support for Aboriginal youth, how to incorporate Aboriginal worldviews across different stages of interventions, and how to capture impact best using culturally secure methods.
... Action research, as described by Brydon-Miller et al. (2003) and Kemmis & McTaggart (2014) was conducted in all case studies from 2022 to 2023. The research team at the University of Thessaly conducted CS1 and CS4 and the team at Aristotle University conducted CS2 and CS3. ...
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Equity in Education: A Handbook for Participative Approaches in Research and Development to Address School Inequalities t has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 101004653. This handbook stands out for its focus on participatory and co-creative approaches that place marginalized communities at the center of both inquiry and action, effectively bridging the gap between theory and practice. It offers adaptable, community-focused methods that enable stakeholders – teachers, parents, students, and policymakers – to work together on designing and implementing inclusive educational reforms. Rooted in a commitment to social justice, the handbook underlines both the methodological rigor and the tangible, real-world applications needed to advance equity in education.
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Environmental education (EE) is fundamental in empowering individuals to address contemporary environmental challenges. Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), a key framework within EE, broadens the scope of EE in formal education systems by integrating sustainable development principles into broader educational and societal practices. Environmental leadership education (ELE), an essential component of ESD, emphasizes the acquisition of knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary to promote sustainable development. It is tailored to address the specific needs of different societal segments, drawing on various theoretical frameworks such as transformative learning, lifelong learning, and experiential learning. Proficiency in technical and adaptive competencies and skills for addressing environmental issues in diverse contexts should be considered when designing development and training programs. Key pedagogical strategies for ELE, which facilitate the cultivation of the knowledge, skills, values, and attitudes required for developing environmental leaders, are explored. Furthermore, this chapter reviews various educational resources developed by United Nations agencies and other global educational institutions for facilitating ELE, including an argument for the professional development of teachers in EE. Case studies of innovative development programs that enhance environmental leadership are also reviewed. Lastly, a set of guidelines for designing and evaluating environmental leadership development and training programs is introduced.
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Cultural tourism is a fast‐growing segment in the tourism industry and is estimated to be around 40% of the tourist segments globally. After COVID‐19, this has come back with renewed force. Regional attractions such as experience centers, museums, event developers, city developers, tourism offices, and so forth need to work together to create enough “reason‐to‐go” and subsequent “reason‐to‐stay” experiential qualities in their tourism service value propositions. Through two larger cultural tourism case projects, we investigate how one can bring ecosystem tourism stakeholders together through codesign tangible methods to ideate on cross‐locational experiential service value propositions and what opportunities and difficulties seem to emerge through this. In the first project, three regional museums and a tourism destination office worked together to find shared themes and connected stories. In the second project, seven Second World War museums, three tourism offices, and design developers collaborated to extract three experiential journeys that visitors could follow. We illustrate how a series of codesign interventions can engage a cross‐disciplinary circle of stakeholders and lead to novel insights and shared understandings, establish common ground, and generate ideas with potential. In addition, we analyze the use and effect of introducing codesign methods that can support the development of shared themes and stories attracting visitors and international tourists. Through observations, video recordings, and interaction analysis, we outline both the opportunities and difficulties found in these collaborations. The opportunities point to the possibilities in providing an attractive offering through a series of connected stories that involve the value chain of travel, food, and accommodation providers and in training the front personnel to guide to the next places. The difficulties point to issues such as the gap between stories as marketing and the stories as they are experienced on location and the difficulty in aligning practices according to a central story line and overall service value proposition across various distances and time. From the perspective of experiential service design, the results have theoretical implications because a holistic service flows through cross‐locational and cross‐organizational touchpoints while the practical implications also point to the development of ecosystems of tourism actors working closely together.
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This article provides an account of a 10‐year collaborative documentation of community leadership in an African American community on the South side of Chicago. The stories are oriented to several critical incidents in the life course of the collaboration. They are told from the perspectives of one university professor, four graduate students, and one community leader. Together they provide an account of how this research was shaped by the interactions of the research team with members of the community, how research questions emerged, methodologies were developed, ways of gathering data were tried and tested, and interpretations of data unfolded. Special attention is given to the ways in which the process and products of this research contributed to the community's own process of leadership development. The stories also discuss the various roles participants in this collaboration played both in the academic arena and in the community, and how they experienced gender, race, nationality, and social status.
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Crenshaw outlines the history and basic tenets of critical race theory. While critical race theory does not have a coherent set of fundamental ideas, scholars of this school of thought typically share two primary interests. First is to understand how white supremacy is maintained and related to legal ideals. Second is to change this state of affairs. Based in Critical Legal Studies, Critical Race Theory challenges elitism and exclusivity in the law. It focuses on the law's racist aspects, particularly the changing trends in racism. For example, colorblindness is now seen as preferable to race-consciousness, despite the fact that colorblindness merely masks the power embedded in such an ideology. Critical Race Theory developed in two prominent ways. First, the student protest at Harvard Law School in 1981 began a new avenue of legal study. Second, the Critical Legal Studies National Conference on silence and race solidified the place of Critical Race Theory in Critical Legal Studies.
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In challenging orthodoxy, questioning the premises of liberalism, and debating sacred wisdoms, Critical Race Theory scholars writing over the past few years have indelibly changed the way America looks at race. This book contains treatment of all the topics covered in the first edition, along with provocative and probing questions for discussion and detailed suggestions for additional reading. In addition, this anthology collects writings about various aspect of social theory -- crime, critical race practice, intergroup tensions and alliances, gay/lesbian issues, and transcending the black-white binary paradigm of race. In each of these areas, groundbreaking scholarship by the movement's founding figures as well as the brightest new stars provides immediate entre to current trends and developments in critical civil rights thought.
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John F. Kerry United States Senator If we are to reinvigorate and reinforce civic participation in this country at a time when our society is increasingly fragmented and highly technologically based, we must find a way to unite distinct communities, such as universities, regional and non-profit organizations, and families. We must find ways to link academicians, students, teachers, and professionals with the reality of events and circumstances so that theories and ideas mightily pursued within the "ivory tower" are connected to social reality and useful. As the editors and contributors in this volume point out, the way to bridge theory/practice divide is not merely to interpret and report on circumstances of the real-world; but rather, to deconstruct the separate and distinct communities that exist within our society and actively engage other communities to realize a continuum of mutual understanding, collaboration, and action. It is crucial to include our nation's public schools in this new approach of social inquiry and social action. Improving and creating educational opportunity for all children in the United States has been an ongoing critical federal issue. We know that when children achieve in school they have a much greater chance of living healthy, productive adult lives that will benefit themselves and society, and we know that increasing the base of stakeholders in children's education yields those positive results.
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Rethinking questions of identity, social agency and national affiliation, Bhabha provides a working, if controversial, theory of cultural hybridity - one that goes far beyond previous attempts by others. In The Location of Culture, he uses concepts such as mimicry, interstice, hybridity, and liminality to argue that cultural production is always most productive where it is most ambivalent. Speaking in a voice that combines intellectual ease with the belief that theory itself can contribute to practical political change, Bhabha has become one of the leading post-colonial theorists of this era.