然而,我们生活、奋斗和成功:使用Photovoice了解社区成员的正义、安全、希望和种族平等的经历

M. Wendel, Trinidad Jackson, C. M. Ingram, Tasha L. Golden, Billie F. Castle, Nida M. Ali, R. Combs
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引用次数: 5

摘要

居民的经历为推动社会和健康差距扩大的因素提供了丰富的见解,而这些经历并不是同质的。只有关注人们的生活经历,社会才会开始将其视为整个社区的问题,只有让居民参与社区变革的过程,才能实现所需的变革。Photovoice是一种参与性的定性研究方法,它表达了参与者的经验和观点,同时促进了社会行动和社会变革的批判性意识的提高。这项研究采用了Photovoice过程来探索居民和在为西路易斯维尔服务的组织中工作的人的经历和观点,并促进对话和行动,从而导致社会变革。来自八个团体的43人完成了Photovoice项目,他们代表青年、老年人、LGBTQ人群、信仰领袖、教育工作者、活动家和两组黑人。对照片的分析以及八个群体内部和之间的群体对话确定了几个共同的主题,这些主题指出了社区中历史和当前的结构性种族主义、城市对黑人社区缺乏关注、黑人历史的重要性以及社区集体行动的必要性。公共摄影之声展览有助于为该市健康公平中心的后续议程提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Yet We Live, Strive, and Succeed: Using Photovoice to Understand Community Members’ Experiences of Justice, Safety, Hope, and Racial Equity
Residents’ experiences provide rich insight into the factors that drive widening social and health disparities, and those experiences are not homogeneous. Only through attending to people’s lived experiences will society begin to see these as issues of the entire community, and only by engaging residents in the process of community change can the kinds of change that are needed ever be achieved. Photovoice is a participatory qualitative research method that gives voice to participants’ experiences and perspectives while simultaneously facilitating critical consciousness-raising for social action and social change. This study employed a Photovoice process to explore experiences and perspectives of residents and people working in organizations that serve West Louisville, and to facilitate dialogue and action leading to social change. Forty-three individuals across eight groups completed the Photovoice project, representing youth, older adults, LGBTQ people, faith leaders, educators, activists, and two groups of Black men. Analysis of photos and group dialogue within and across the eight groups identified several common themes that pointed at the historical and present structural racism in the community, the city’s lack of concern for the Black community, the importance of Black history, and the need for collective community action. The public Photovoice exhibit helped inform the subsequent agenda for the city’s Center for Health Equity.
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