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Emergent ethics in participatory video: negotiating the inherent tensions as group processes evolve
Author(s) -
Shaw Jacqueline
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
area
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.958
H-Index - 82
eISSN - 1475-4762
pISSN - 0004-0894
DOI - 10.1111/area.12167
Subject(s) - negotiation , praxis , sociology , citizen journalism , context (archaeology) , agency (philosophy) , dynamics (music) , participatory gis , public relations , engineering ethics , knowledge management , computer science , political science , pedagogy , social science , engineering , world wide web , paleontology , law , biology
Community practitioner‐researchers are enthusiastic about participatory video's potential in opening space for new relational dynamics to evolve across difference. In reality, practice involves negotiation between the intention to build expressive agency and the (often conflicting) agendas of the variously positioned project actors. There is an ethical need to acknowledge the messy reality of the participatory video context, interrogate the power dynamics as processes evolve and understand participants' experiences of taking part. Research into the approach of R eal T ime, a UK ‐based participatory video project provider, identified key practice tensions as basis for more nuanced praxis. In this paper, I reflect on three tensions as they manifested in two UK projects: one with women from community development backgrounds and one with men on a residential drug programme. I consider participatory video as an iteratively evolving group process and suggest that the relationships that develop through project interactions are a key to maximising possibilities. I propose that negotiating practice ethically is an intrinsic factor in the emergent dynamics, which needs ongoing consideration. I conclude that there is insufficient contextualised understanding about how participatory video's potential can be enabled or constrained in longer term projects.

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