Critical Participatory Action Research: Methods and Praxis for Intersectional Knowledge Production

Building on the conceptual foundation of articles published in the 2005 volume of the Journal of Counseling Psychology on the qualitative turn in Counseling Psychology, we write to introduce and reflect on Critical Participatory Action Research (CPAR) as an intersectional approach to knowledge produ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of counseling psychology 2021-04, Vol.68 (3), p.344-356
Hauptverfasser: Fine, Michelle, Torre, María Elena, Oswald, Austin Gerhard, Avory, Shéár
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Building on the conceptual foundation of articles published in the 2005 volume of the Journal of Counseling Psychology on the qualitative turn in Counseling Psychology, we write to introduce and reflect on Critical Participatory Action Research (CPAR) as an intersectional approach to knowledge production by psychologists researching alongside individuals, communities, and movements dedicated to social justice. We open with a brief review of the origins of CPAR and the epistemological commitments of this approach to inquiry. We then explore why and how participation matters, and the delicate dynamics of CPAR through various phases of research: putting together a research team, crafting research questions and design, selecting methods, sampling, participatory analyses of qualitative and quantitative material, and figuring out how to produce and circulate findings in ways accountable to the community/movement of interest. The second half of the article offers a slow journey into one CPAR project, What's Your Issue?, a multigenerational, national, participatory survey designed by and for LGBTQIA+ youth, with an emphasis on the participation and representation of youth of color. We write this article for scholars, practitioners, activists, educators, and students to make visible why participation is so crucial to social justice research; that "no research on us, without us" is both scientifically and ethically valid, and how mixed methods research with LGBTQIA+ and gender-expansive youth can open new horizons for theory, methods, and action. Public Significance Statement This article reflects on critical participatory action research as a form of scholarship designed with and for communities experiencing harm and injustice. The article details methodological, ethical, and political concerns in CPAR work and points to specific ways for counseling psychologists to begin engaging this novel form of scholarly inquiry.
ISSN:0022-0167
1939-2168
DOI:10.1037/cou0000445