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‘I will play this tokenistic game, I just want something useful for my community’: experiences of and resistance to harms of peer research

Lori E. Ross, Merrick Pilling, Jijian Voronka, Kendra-Ann Pitt, Elizabeth McLean, C. Daly King, Yogendra Shakya, Kinnon R. MacKinnon, Charmaine C. Williams, Carol Strıke, Adrian Guţă

2023Critical Public Health22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hiring peer researchers – individuals with lived experience of the phenomenon under study – is an increasingly popular practice. However, little research has examined experiences of peer research from the perspectives of peer researchers themselves. In this paper, we report on data from a participatory, qualitative research project focused on four intersecting communities often engaged in peer research: mental health service user/consumer/survivor; people who use drugs; racialized; and trans/non-binary communities. In total, 34 individuals who had worked as peer researchers participated in semi-structured interviews. Transcripts and interviewer reflections were analyzed using a participatory approach. Many participants reported exposure to intersecting forms of systemic oppression (racism, transphobia, ableism, and classism, among others) and disparagement of their identities and lived experiences, both from other members of the research team and from the broader institutions in which they were working. Peer researchers described being required to perform academic professionalism, while simultaneously representing communities that were explicitly or implicitly denigrated in the course of their work. Practices of resistance to these harms were evident throughout the interviews, and participants often made strategic decisions to permit themselves to be tokenized, out of the expectation of promised benefits to their communities. However, additional harms were often experienced when these benefits were not realized. These findings point towards the need for a more reflexive and critical approach to the use of peer research.

Topics & Concepts

ReflexivityResistance (ecology)Qualitative researchParticipatory action researchOppressionSociologyPublic relationsInterviewPhoto elicitationPeer reviewSocial psychologyPsychologyPoliticsPolitical scienceSocial scienceAnthropologyBiologyLawEcologyMental Health and Patient InvolvementHealth Policy Implementation SciencePrimary Care and Health Outcomes
‘I will play this tokenistic game, I just want something useful for my community’: experiences of and resistance to harms of peer research | Litcius