Methods for Community-Based Research: Advancing Educational Justice and Epistemic Rights

Author:   María Paula Ghiso ,  Gerald Campano (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032246673


Pages:   146
Publication Date:   23 April 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Methods for Community-Based Research: Advancing Educational Justice and Epistemic Rights


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Overview

Methods for Community-Based Research describes how Community-Based Research (CBR) is particularly suited to understand and take action on issues of educational justice. The book shifts assumptions about who is considered a researcher, drawing attention to issues of power and the ethics of collaborations, and foregrounding how those who have often been positioned as the objects of educational interventions can—and have the rights to—play an active role in creating educational arrangements more conducive to their own flourishing. The authors draw on a decade-long partnership across the boundaries of race, language, immigration status, and institutional affiliation to provide examples that illustrate the complexities and possibilities of this work. They distill principles, practices, and ongoing inquiries for researchers to consider across all aspects of the research process. The book supports researchers in creating the conditions for collaborative inquiry into issues of educational (in)justice that are salient to community partners. It will be of interest to advanced undergraduate, graduate students and scholars in education, and other disciplines that utilize a CBR method such as healthcare research and anthropology, as well as scholars interested in qualitative methods and issues of social justice in research.

Full Product Details

Author:   María Paula Ghiso ,  Gerald Campano (University of Pennsylvania, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.290kg
ISBN:  

9781032246673


ISBN 10:   1032246677
Pages:   146
Publication Date:   23 April 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

“This book, grounded in more than a decade of partnership work, offers compelling ethical and practical guidance to scholars seeking to learn how to engage in community-based participatory research that embodies a pluralistic stance toward knowledge-building and that works toward educational justice. Its detailed portraits of meeting agendas, dilemmas and ideological tensions of research practice, and jointly constructed artifacts of inquiry provide exemplary models for how to center care, relationship, and justice in research.” -- William Penuel, Distinguished Professor, Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Colorado Boulder, USA “I cannot imagine a more indispensable resource for community-based scholarship! Drawing on rich theory and community knowledges, engrossing narratives, and detailed examples and photos, the authors elaborate the complexities, relationalities, and profound ontologies of collaborative inquiry between university-based researchers, youth, families, communities, and educators. They bring the often-abstract dimensions of partnering with communities to life with piercing, vulnerable insights from their long-standing efforts to realize research methodologies of love in pursuit of pluralistic knowledge and tangible change with and in communities. If you have ever wondered how research might transform its extractive, colonizing legacy to reckon with power, live radical solidarity, and imagine different worlds in the making, look no further than this book to light our way forward!” -- Ann Ishimaru, Associate Professor, Educational Foundations, Leadership, and Policy, University of Washington College of Education, USA “Methods for Community-Based Research: Advancing Educational Justice and Epistemic Rights is a book for our times. As more communities demand research be conducted “with” rather than “on” them, Ghiso and Campano illuminate the way forward. This book is a compass for fostering collaboration between researchers and communities, paving the way to a more just education system. Through compelling research, this text showcases the transformative power of Community-Based Research, emphasizing community involvement, cultural sensitivity, and empowerment as the cornerstones of change. Ghiso and Campano show that CBRE is more than a methodology; it’s a philosophy that respects the wisdom and agency of those most impacted by educational inequities. This book is a guide to conducting research that is not only respectful and inclusive but also effective.” -- Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz, Professor of English Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, USA


“This book, grounded in more than a decade of partnership work, offers compelling ethical and practical guidance to scholars seeking to learn how to engage in community-based participatory research that embodies a pluralistic stance toward knowledge-building and that works toward educational justice. Its detailed portraits of meeting agendas, dilemmas and ideological tensions of research practice, and jointly constructed artifacts of inquiry provide exemplary models for how to center care, relationship, and justice in research.” -- William Penuel, Distinguished Professor, Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Colorado Boulder, USA “I cannot imagine a more indispensable resource for community-based scholarship! Drawing on rich theory and community knowledges, engrossing narratives, and detailed examples and photos, the authors elaborate the complexities, relationalities, and profound ontologies of collaborative inquiry between university-based researchers, youth, families, communities, and educators. They bring the often-abstract dimensions of partnering with communities to life with piercing, vulnerable insights from their long-standing efforts to realize research methodologies of love in pursuit of pluralistic knowledge and tangible change with and in communities. If you have ever wondered how research might transform its extractive, colonizing legacy to reckon with power, live radical solidarity, and imagine different worlds in the making, look no further than this book to light our way forward!” -- Ann Ishimaru, Associate Professor, Educational Foundations, Leadership, and Policy, University of Washington College of Education, USA “Methods for Community-Based Research: Advancing Educational Justice and Epistemic Rights is a book for our times. As more communities demand research be conducted “with” rather than “on” them, Ghiso and Campano illuminate the way forward. This book is a compass for fostering collaboration between researchers and communities, paving the way to a more just education system. Through compelling research, this text showcases the transformative power of Community-Based Research, emphasizing community involvement, cultural sensitivity, and empowerment as the cornerstones of change. Ghiso and Campano show that CBRE is more than a methodology; it’s a philosophy that respects the wisdom and agency of those most impacted by educational inequities. This book is a guide to conducting research that is not only respectful and inclusive but also effective.” -- Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz, Professor of English Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, USA “This book, grounded in more than a decade of partnership work, offers compelling ethical and practical guidance to scholars seeking to learn how to engage in community-based participatory research that embodies a pluralistic stance toward knowledge-building and that works toward educational justice. Its detailed portraits of meeting agendas, dilemmas and ideological tensions of research practice, and jointly constructed artifacts of inquiry provide exemplary models for how to center care, relationship, and justice in research.” -- William Penuel, Distinguished Professor, Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Colorado Boulder, USA “I cannot imagine a more indispensable resource for community-based scholarship! Drawing on rich theory and community knowledges, engrossing narratives, and detailed examples and photos, the authors elaborate the complexities, relationalities, and profound ontologies of collaborative inquiry between university-based researchers, youth, families, communities, and educators. They bring the often-abstract dimensions of partnering with communities to life with piercing, vulnerable insights from their long-standing efforts to realize research methodologies of love in pursuit of pluralistic knowledge and tangible change with and in communities. If you have ever wondered how research might transform its extractive, colonizing legacy to reckon with power, live radical solidarity, and imagine different worlds in the making, look no further than this book to light our way forward!” -- Ann Ishimaru, Killinger Endowed Chair & Professor, Educational Foundations, Leadership & Policy, College of Education at the University of Washington, USA “Methods for Community-Based Research: Advancing Educational Justice and Epistemic Rights is a book for our times. As more communities demand research be conducted “with” rather than “on” them, Ghiso and Campano illuminate the way forward. This book is a compass for fostering collaboration between researchers and communities, paving the way to a more just education system. Through compelling research, this text showcases the transformative power of Community-Based Research, emphasizing community involvement, cultural sensitivity, and empowerment as the cornerstones of change. Ghiso and Campano show that CBRE is more than a methodology; it’s a philosophy that respects the wisdom and agency of those most impacted by educational inequities. This book is a guide to conducting research that is not only respectful and inclusive but also effective.” -- Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz, Professor of English Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, USA


Author Information

María Paula Ghiso is Professor of Literacy Education in the Department of Curriculum and Teaching at Teachers College, Columbia University in New York City, USA. Gerald Campano is Professor of Literacy Studies at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education in Philadelphia, PA, USA.

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