共同激活社会变革:协作变革研究、评估和设计文献的定性综合

IF 0.9 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Melida D Busch, Elizabeth Jean-Baptiste, Pamela F Person, L. Vaughn
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引用次数: 3

摘要

来自不同学科和行业部门的研究人员、评估人员和设计师在寻求理解和解决复杂的社会问题时,正在转向参与式方法。我们将参与式方法称为协同变革研究、评估和设计(CCRED),即与利益相关者合作创造知识/解决行动/社会变革结果的问题。我们进一步描述了CCRED实践者的愿望,即超越为知识本身而创造知识,将新知识作为社会变革的工具加以实施。在2018年3月和5月,我们对多个特定学科的数据库进行了文献检索,寻找协作的、面向变革的学术出版物。搜索仅限于最近5年发表的同行评议的期刊文章,并提供英文摘要。搜索结果为526条引用,其中236条符合纳入标准。虽然搜索仅限于英文摘要,但所有主要地理区域(北美、欧洲、拉丁美洲/加勒比、亚太地区、非洲和中东)都在结果中有所体现,尽管许多文章没有说明具体的地区。在这些已确定的研究中,大多数研究位于北美,中东只有一项已确定的研究。我们遵循了一个定性的主题综合过程来检查同行评议文章的摘要,以确定超越个别学科、部门和背景的实践,以实现协作变革。我们调查了用于描述CCRED的术语、设置、研究内容/主题、合作类型和相关收益/结果,以便辨别用于指定合作的词语、所采用的框架、工具和方法,以及行动、评估或结果的存在。被审查的文章中有43%广泛属于社会科学领域,其次是教育领域的26%和卫生/医学领域的25%。就被审查文章中的参与者和/或合作者而言,236篇文章中的绝大多数(86%)描述了参与者,即研究对象或数据收集对象。与参与者相比,合作伙伴/合作者(n=32;14%)是参与所描述的协作变更工作的设计或实现的个人或团体。就协作和/或完成工作的目标而言,最常用的术语与参与和授权的某些方面有关。作品本身的常见描述词是“社会变革”(n=74;31%),“行动”(n=33;14%),“合作或参与式研究/实践”(n=13;6%),“转型”(n=13;6%)和“社区参与”(n=10;4%)。在提到具体框架或方法的236篇文章中,最常见的三篇是参与行动研究的某种变体(n=30;50%),行动研究(n=40;16.9%)或基于社区的参与性研究(n=17;7.2%)。236篇文章中约有三分之一在摘要中没有提到具体的方法或工具。最常被引用的方法/工具(n=30;12.7%)是基于艺术的方法的一些变化,然后是访谈(n=18;7.6%),案例研究(n=16;6.7%),或人种学相关方法(n=14;5.9%)。虽然有些文章暗示了行动或改变,但236篇文章中只有14篇(6%)陈述了具体的行动或结果。最常见的变化是:模型、方法、过程、框架或协议的创建或修改(n=9;4%)、质量改进、政策变化和社会变革(n=8;3%),或修改教育/培训方法和材料(n=5;2%)。很少使用协作作为合作伙伴参与的描述,加上很少报告可衡量的变化的发现,引起了对CCRED性质的质疑。开展CCRED工作似乎与该工作试图解决的问题一样复杂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Activating social change together: A qualitative synthesis of collaborative change research, evaluation and design literature
Researchers, evaluators and designers from an array of academic disciplines and industry sectors are turning to participatory approaches as they seek to understand and address complex social problems. We refer to participatory approaches that collaboratively engage/partner with stakeholders in knowledge creation/problem solving for action/social change outcomes as collaborative change research, evaluation and design (CCRED). We further frame CCRED practitioners by their desire to move beyond knowledge creation for its own sake to implementation of new knowledge as a tool for social change. In March and May of 2018, we conducted a literature search of multiple discipline-specific databases seeking collaborative, change-oriented scholarly publications. The search was limited to include peer-reviewed journal articles, with English language abstracts available, published in the last five years. The search resulted in 526 citations, 236 of which met inclusion criteria. Though the search was limited to English abstracts, all major geographic regions (North America, Europe, Latin America/Caribbean, APAC, Africa and the Middle East) were represented within the results, although many articles did not state a specific region. Of those identified, most studies were located in North America, with the Middle East having only one identified study. We followed a qualitative thematic synthesis process to examine the abstracts of peer-reviewed articles to identify practices that transcend individual disciplines, sectors and contexts to achieve collaborative change. We surveyed the terminology used to describe CCRED, setting, content/topic of study, type of collaboration, and related benefits/outcomes in order to discern the words used to designate collaboration, the frameworks, tools and methods employed, and the presence of action, evaluation or outcomes. Forty-three percent of the reviewed articles fell broadly within the social sciences, followed by 26 percent in education and 25 percent in health/medicine. In terms of participants and/or collaborators in the articles reviewed, the vast majority of the 236 articles (86%) described participants, that is, those who the research was about or from whom data was collected. In contrast to participants, partners/collaborators (n=32; 14%) were individuals or groups who participated in the design or implementation of the collaborative change effort described. In terms of the goal for collaboration and/or for doing the work, the most frequently used terminology related to some aspect of engagement and empowerment. Common descriptors for the work itself were ‘social change’ (n=74; 31%), ‘action’ (n=33; 14%), ‘collaborative or participatory research/practice’ (n=13; 6%), ‘transformation’ (n=13; 6%) and ‘community engagement’ (n=10; 4%). Of the 236 articles that mentioned a specific framework or approach, the three most common were some variation of Participatory Action Research (n=30; 50%), Action Research (n=40; 16.9%) or Community-Based Participatory Research (n=17; 7.2%). Approximately a third of the 236 articles did not mention a specific method or tool in the abstract. The most commonly cited method/tool (n=30; 12.7%) was some variation of an arts-based method followed by interviews (n=18; 7.6%), case study (n=16; 6.7%), or an ethnographic-related method (n=14; 5.9%). While some articles implied action or change, only 14 of the 236 articles (6%) stated a specific action or outcome. Most often, the changes described were: the creation or modification of a model, method, process, framework or protocol (n=9; 4%), quality improvement, policy change and social change (n=8; 3%), or modifications to education/training methods and materials (n=5; 2%). The infrequent use of collaboration as a descriptor of partner engagement, coupled with few reported findings of measurable change, raises questions about the nature of CCRED. It appears that conducting CCRED is as complex an undertaking as the problems that the work is attempting to address.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
28.60%
发文量
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审稿时长
34 weeks
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