Litcius/Paper detail

Social Justice is the Spirit and Aim of an Applied Science of Human Behavior: Moving from Colonial to Participatory Research Practices

Malika Pritchett, Shahla Ala'i, Alicia Re Cruz, Traci M. Cihon

202019 citationsDOI

Abstract

It is time for a paradigm shift in the science of applied behavior analysis. Our current approach to applied research perpetuates power imbalances. We posit that the purpose of applied behavior analysis is to enable and expand human rights and to eliminate the legacies of colonial, oppressive social structures. We report the findings from our examination of the content of our flagship applied research journal. We reviewed 50 years of applied experiments from the standpoint of respect, beneficence, justice, and the participation of individuals and communities. Although there is some promise and movement toward inclusion, our findings indicate that we have not prioritized full participation across all segments of society, especially persons and communities that are marginalized. Social justice rests on the belief that human life is to be universally cherished and valued. In this paper we suggest that policies, strategies, and research practices within our field be interwoven with a commitment to social justice, including racial justice, for all. We offer recommendations to neutralize and diffuse power imbalances and to work toward a shift from colonial to participatory practices in the methods and aims of our applied science.

Topics & Concepts

ColonialismBeneficenceParticipatory action researchSociologyPower (physics)Economic JusticeCitizen journalismSocial justiceEnvironmental ethicsInclusion (mineral)Political sciencePublic relationsCriminologySocial scienceLawAutonomyAnthropologyQuantum mechanicsPhilosophyPhysicsCommunity Health and DevelopmentBehavioral and Psychological StudiesHealth Policy Implementation Science