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Implications of participation and equality in the research process for health promotion practice: domestic violence as an example
Author(s) -
Fisher Colleen
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
health promotion journal of australia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.515
H-Index - 32
eISSN - 2201-1617
pISSN - 1036-1073
DOI - 10.1071/he11119
Subject(s) - participatory action research , public relations , health promotion , focus group , stakeholder , community based participatory research , sociology , community health , sierra leone , action research , political science , public health , nursing , medicine , socioeconomics , pedagogy , anthropology
Issue Addressed Contemporary health promotion is underpinned by a philosophy of participation and working with communities to build strength and capacity. This article adds to literature, describing how this is operationalised in health promotion research. Methods The operationalisation of participation and equality in a participatory action research (PAR) project examining domestic violence in five communities from an African refugee background, post settlement in Perth (Ethiopia, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Somalia and Sudan) is described. The qualitative research undertaken included 78 participants: 54 from the five communities and 24 from health and support agency staff who provide services to them and utilised in‐depth interviews and focus groups. Results Ongoing participation by community members and equality within stakeholder relationships was facilitated by the project being community‐initiated, the crystallisation of strong stakeholder relationships, data collection by trained bicultural, bilingual interviewers from the five communities, and ongoing involvement of the communities through data analysis and report‐writing phases. Conclusions All stakeholders are able to learn from the perspectives and knowledge of others. Equality can supplant a subject‐object relationship typical of much research and evident in some practice, with a subject‐subject relationship. It can also transpose community members from the margins to the centre of research and practice. How community strength and capacity can be built through research is instructive for health promotion practice. So what? Community members can and do make a valuable contribution to health promotion research. Resulting programs or interventions are much more likely to be appropriate, supported and more sustainable.