Series Foreword—Clara E. Hill and Sarah Knox
1. Critical Participatory Action Research: Conceptual
Foundations
Why CPAR? Critical Elements
Where Collective Wisdom Grows: Participatory Contact Zones
Situating CPAR in the Qualitative Traditions
Critical Epistemological Roots: Widening Our Understanding of
Expertise
Disciplinary Elders: Historical Roots in Community-Based
Inquiry
Crafting and Performing Public-Facing Scholarship for Action,
Transformation, and Provocation
2. Participatory Design
Assembling a Diverse Community of Coresearchers
Designing Mirrors and Windows
Images of Opening Sessions
Methodological Release Points: Strategies for Unleashing Collective
Wisdom
A Cautionary Note on Privilege in the Contact Zone
Building an Ethical Research Collective: Ethics and Institutional
Review Boards
3. Participatory Knowledge Production
Piloting: Accountability to and Feedback From the Community
Finalizing the Instrument: A Qualitative Participatory National
Survey?
Cascading Research Questions: Evolving Inquiries in the
Participatory Contact Zone
Growing a Sample of Radical Inclusivity and Structural
Intersectionality
Inquiry Marinating in Communities of Care, Concern, and Action
4. Participatory Analysis Moving Toward Action
Slicing the Data
Steps of Participatory Analysis: Culling the Database, Macro
Review, and Then Coding
Coding: The Stories and Analysis
Creating a Codebook
Bending Analysis Toward Action
5. Vibrant Variations and Grounding Questions
Grounding Questions for Critical Participatory Inquiry
Participatory Research as a Tool of Struggle and Solidarity in
Contentious Times
Challenges and Joys
6. Methodological Integrity
Fidelity and Diversity
To Be of Use: Action, Transformation, and Provocation
CPAR Touchstones for Integrity and Accountability
Evaluating CPAR: How Do You Know Whether It Is Good Enough?
7. Writing Process and Research Products
Epilogue: Critical PAR in Crisis: An Epistemic Offering Toward
Solidarity
References
Index
About the Authors
About the Series Editors
Michelle Fine, PhD, is a Distinguished Professor of Critical
Psychology, Women's Studies, American Studies and Urban Education
at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY).
Her primary research interest is the study of social injustice:
when injustice appears as fair or deserved, when it is resisted,
and how it is negotiated by those who pay the most serious price
for social inequities. She studies these issues in public high
schools, prisons, and with youth in urban communities, using both
qualitative and quantitative methods. Dr. Fine is a founding
faculty member of the Public Science Project, which produces
critical scholarship for use in social policy debates and
organizing movements for educational equity and human rights. Dr.
Fine has been a visiting scholar at the University of New Zealand
in Auckland and a Fulbright scholar at the Institute for Arab
Studies at Haifa University. She and her colleagues have provided
expert testimony in more than a dozen groundbreaking legal
victories focused on gender, race, and class equity in education.
Among other awards, Dr. Fine has received the 2013 American
Psychological Association Award for Distinguished Contributions to
Research in Public Policy, the 2012 Henry A. Murray Award from the
Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Division 8 of the
American Psychological Association, the 2010 Social Justice and
Higher Education Award from the College and Community Fellowship
for her work in prison, and the 2011 Elizabeth Hurlock Beckman
Award for her mentoring legacy over the past 25 years.
María Elena Torre, PhD, is the founding director of The
Public Science Project. For the last 15 years, she has been engaged
in critical participatory action research projects nationally and
internationally with schools, prisons, and community-based
organizations seeking to further social justice. Her work
introduced the concept of 'participatory contact zones' to
collaborative research, and she continues to be interested in how
democratic methodologies, radical inclusion, and notions of
solidarity impact scientific inquiry. Before becoming director of
The Public Science Project, Dr. Torre was Chair of Education
Studies at Eugene Lang College, The New School for Liberal Arts.
She is a coauthor of Echoes of Brown: Youth Documenting and
Performing the Legacy of Brown v. Board of Education and Changing
Minds: The Impact of College on a Maximum Security Prison. Her
writing can also be found in volumes such as the Handbook of
Qualitative Research in Psychology (American Psychological
Association), Participatory Action Research Approaches and Methods:
Connecting People, Participation, and Place (Routledge), the
Handbook of Action Research (SAGE), and in journals such as
Feminism and Psychology, the Journal of Social Issues, Qualitative
Inquiry, and the Journal of Critical Psychology. Dr. Torre was a
recipient of the American Psychological Association Division 35
Adolescent Girls Task Force Emerging Scientist and the National
Academy of Education/Spencer Foundation Fellowship in Social
Justice & Social Development in Educational Studies, and is on the
national board of the National Latino/a Education Research and
Policy Project and What Kids Can Do.
Essentials of Critical Participatory Action Research is an engaging
text for scholar-activists who are interested in conducting
qualitative research with and for communities that have been
historically disenfranchised, erased, or pathologized in
traditional research. The authors, with their vast knowledge of
conducting critical qualitative research with marginalized
communities, guide the reader in considering alternative and
affirming methods and analyses, as well as nontraditional venues
for disseminating their work. What I appreciate most about the text
is its consistent integrations of intersectional analyses—reminding
readers to acknowledge their own privilege while being vigilant for
the inequitable power dynamics that are far too typical among
“experts” conducting the research and “subjects” who need to be
studied or saved.
*Kevin L. Nadal, PhD, City University of New York, New York*
Excellent! This outstanding book illustrates how to engage in
critical participatory research WITH, not ON, marginalized groups
interested in challenging oppression. Rooted in the activist call
of, “No research on us, without us,” Michelle Fine and María Elena
Torre masterfully demonstrate how to tap into collective wisdom as
they collaborate in research with diverse oppressed groups in an
empowering, emancipatory, and ethical manner. Essentials of
Critical Participatory Action Research is a must-read for
researchers, social scientists, educators, and trainees who endorse
a commitment to social justice.
*Lillian Comas-Díaz, PhD, Clinical Professor, Department of
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, George Washington University,
Washington, DC, author of Multicultural Care: A Clinician’s Guide
to Cultural Competence*
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