PAR: Barriers and Ethical Considerations
Jonathan Pickens
What is PAR?
- Participatory Action Research (PAR),
- Community Based Participatory Research (CBPR)
-
PAR is NOT a specific method (1)
-
Inclusive form of inquiry to enhance existing methodologies (2)
-
Inquiry as a means to social change
-
Concern for the kind of knowledge produced and how it is produced (3)
-
Knowledge isn't neutral! An Incomplete list of missing data-sets
-
- Pain, R., & Francis, P. (2003). Area, 35(1), 46-54.
-
Khanlou, N., & Peter, E. (2005). Science & Medicine, 60(10), 2333–2340.
-
Gustafson, D. L., & Brunger, F. (2014) Qual Health Research, 24(7), 997–1005
Ok, but what is PAR?
-
Participant-Researcher relationship re-framed as an exchange
-
PAR is characterized by being: (1)
-
Participatory
-
Cooperative
-
A co-learning process
-
supportive of systems development and capacity building
-
Empowering to participants
-
Balanced between research and action
-
- Israel, et al (1998). Annual review of public health, 19(1), 173-202
History of PAR
Action Research
"Northern Tradition"
- Clinical & Social Psychology traditions
- 1946- Kurt Lewin coined approach in which combined generation of theory with changing the social system
Participation Research
"Southern Tradition"
- Early 1970s- Many traditions develop in global south, often independently (e.g. Friere)
- 1981- Budd L. Hall defines the practice as a structural change for exploited/oppressed groups to steer research.
PAR popularized in adult education, cross-cultural, and health research
-
Khanlou, N., & Peter, E. (2005). Science & Medicine, 60(10), 2333–2340.
Why bother?
- Iterative, allowing frequent knowledge exchanges between researchers and community members
-
Improves research design
-
Enhance credibility of resulting knowledge
-
Increase community ownership of initiatives
-
Enhance uptake of actionable messages
-
Concrete improvements in the lives of participants
-
Gustafson, D. L., & Brunger, F. (2014) Qual Health Research, 24(7), 997–1005
Ethics of PAR
In line with Principals of APA Ethics Code
- A) Beneficence and Nonmaleficence
- Priotitizing participant needs
- B) Fidelity and Responsibility
-
E) Respect for People's Rights and Dignity
- Maximizes participant self-determination
-
D) Justice
- Acknowledges researcher bias and boundaries of competence
- Fair and equal research process
- Serves the interests of participants
Ethics of PAR
- Other Ethical benefits:
- Distribution of research benefits/risks
- Focus on education
- (8.08) Debriefing as a form of knowledge transfer
- Including skills (e.g. spotting deception) (1)
-
Chabot et al. (2012) collaboration and informed consent in youth research. (2)
-
Critical epistemological paradigms
-
participant-entered, prioritizing "useful" knowledge.
-
-
McShane, et al (2015). Canadian Psychology; Ottawa, 56(1), 80–87.
-
Chabot, et al. (2012). J of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, 7(2), 20–33.
Ethical issues with PAR
Deviation from APA Standards
- 3.05 Multiple Relationships
-
8.01 Institutional Approval
-
“obtain approval prior to conducting the research. They conduct the research in accordance with the approved research protocol.”
-
-
8.02 Informed consent to Research
- (1) the purpose of the research, expected duration, and procedures;
- 8.12 Publication Credit
- 8.13 Duplicate Publication of Data
Other Considerations
- Oppositional nature may increase risk (Principle A & E)
- PAR sometimes viewed dubiously by academia
- Structural obstacle: PAR protocals may be difficult to evaluate in ethical review process (catch-22s)
-
Social dynamics and conventions surrounding research, policy making, and P-R relationship. (2)
- Proposed guidelines after review of ethical review frameworks: (1a)
-
Khanlou, N., & Peter, E. (2005). Science & Medicine, 60(10), 2333–2340.
-
A) Emanuel Wendler and Grady (2000))
-
-
Chabot, et al. (2012). J of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, 7(2), 20–33.
- independent review
- informed consent
- respect for participant
- social or scientific value
- scientific validity
- fair subject/participant selection
- favorable risk–benefit ratio
Example: "Vulnerable" peoples
- 1979 The Belmont Report defined concept of "vulnerable subject" in response to unethical research
- Label conceptualizes all members of the group as ineffective, often tying it to biology
- PAR with disabled populations
- Highlights "differently abled" understanding
Gustafson, D. L., & Brunger, F. (2014) Qual Health Research, 24(7), 997–1005
Proposed Solutions
-
Improve understanding of PAR among peers (esp IRB members)
-
Integrate least problematic aspects of PAR
-
Be receptive to participants – include feedback by design
-
Acknowledging different forms of knowledge present in population of interest
-
Research as an exchange
-
-
Delphi Method to mitigate issues with catch-22s
-
IoR in addition to consent forms
-
Iterative designs
Gustafson, D. L., & Brunger, F. (2014) Qual Health Research, 24(7), 997–1005
Pain, R., & Francis, P. (2003). Reflections on participatory research. Area, 35(1), 46-54.
References
Chabot, C., Shoveller, J. A., Spencer, G., & Johnson, J. L. (2012). Ethical and epistemological insights: A case study of participatory action research with young people. Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, 7(2), 20–33.
Gustafson, D. L., & Brunger, F. (2014). Ethics,“vulnerability,” and feminist participatory action research with a disability community. Qualitative Health Research, 24(7), 997–1005.
Israel, B. A., Schulz, A. J., Parker, E. A., & Becker, A. B. (1998). REVIEW OF COMMUNITY-BASED RESEARCH: Assessing Partnership Approaches to Improve Public Health. Annual Review of Public Health, 19(1), 173–202.
Khanlou, N., & Peter, E. (2005). Participatory action research: considerations for ethical review. Social Science & Medicine, 60(10), 2333–2340.
L’Etang, S., & Theron, L. (2012). A critical reflection on the participatory action process involved in the development of a cognitive-behavioural-based counselling intervention programme for youth living with HIV/AIDS in a rural South African town. Action Research, 10(1), 5–21.
McShane, K. E., Davey, C. J., Rouse, J., Usher, A. M., & Sullivan, S. (2015). Beyond Ethical Obligation to Research Dissemination: Conceptualizing Debriefing as a Form of Knowledge Transfer. Canadian Psychology; Ottawa, 56(1), 80–87.
Nicolaidis, C., Wahab, S., Trimble, J., Mejia, A., Mitchell, S. R., Raymaker, D., … Waters, A. S. (2013). The Interconnections Project: development and evaluation of a community-based depression program for African American violence survivors. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 28(4), 530–538.
Noorani, T., Charlesworth, A., Kite, A., & McDermont, M. (2017). Participatory Research and the Medicalization of Research Ethics Processes. Social & Legal Studies, 26(3), 378–400.
PAR: Barriers and Ethical Considerations
By cypurr
PAR: Barriers and Ethical Considerations
- 158