在线代际参与研究:有意义的关系和参与的成分

L. Lee, L. Wright, C. Machado, Ojaswi Niyogi, Prathit Singh, Sophie Shields, Kristen Hope
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引用次数: 2

摘要

30多年前,随着《联合国儿童权利公约》的通过,儿童的参与权在国际上得到了承认。儿童和年轻人在跨学科研究中越来越多地担任领导、合作和咨询角色,这在许多方面挑战了“传统的”成人研究实践。联合制作承认参与者是专家和知识创造者,让儿童和年轻人参与决策,并解决了传统的成人-儿童等级制度。# covid - 19以下儿童运动旨在促进儿童、青年和儿童权利界成年成员之间的代际伙伴关系,以开展循证宣传,在整个大流行期间以及在应对和恢复过程中维护儿童权利。COVID 4P日志智能手机应用程序旨在更好地了解从业人员和政策制定者在其实践中保护、提供、促进参与和防止伤害的方式。来自世界各国的14至19岁的儿童和年轻人作为共同研究人员和顾问参与研究设计、数据分析和知识交流。本文探讨了# covid - 19青少年作为研究人员的经验,重点关注数据分析和知识交流阶段,并包括他们对研究中有意义的代际伙伴关系的思考。这包括关系的重要性,拥抱“内心的孩子”,以及促进在研究过程中的有意义的参与。该文件最后向其他研究人员提出了关于如何与儿童和年轻人有意义地合作以加强这一进程及其对研究人员和儿童人权的影响的建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Online Intergenerational Participatory Research: Ingredients for Meaningful Relationships and Participation
Over thirty years ago, children’s participation rights were recognized internationally with the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC). Increased involvement of children and young people in lead, collaborative, and advisory roles in interdisciplinary research has challenged ‘traditional’ adult research practices in numerous ways. Co-production recognizes participants as experts and creators of knowledge, engages children and young people in decision-making, and addresses traditional adult-child hierarchies. #CovidUnder19 is a movement that aims to foster intergenerational partnerships between children, young people and adult members of the child rights community to develop evidence-based advocacy to uphold children’s rights throughout the pandemic, as well as in response and recovery. The COVID 4P Log smartphone app was designed to better understand ways practitioners and policymakers protect, provide, enable participation, and prevent harm in their practice. Children and young people aged 14 to 19 from countries around the world are involved as co-researchers and advisors in research design, data analysis, and knowledge exchange. This paper explores the experiences of #CovidUnder19 young people as researchers focusing on the data analysis and knowledge exchange phase and includes their reflections on meaningful intergenerational partnership in research. This includes the importance of relationships, embracing the ‘inner child’, and fostering meaningful participation in the research process. The paper concludes with recommendations for other researchers on how to work in partnership with children and young people meaningfully to strengthen the process and impact for researchers and children’s human rights.
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