Litcius/Paper detail

Unpacking Community Participation in Research: A Systematic Literature Review of Community-based and Participatory Research in Alaska

Anuszka Mosurska, James D. Ford

2020ARCTIC32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although concepts of “community” and “participation” have been heavily critiqued in the social sciences, they remain uncritically applied across disciplines, leading to problems that undermine both research and practice. Nevertheless, these approaches are advocated for, especially in Indigenous contexts. To assess the use of these concepts, we conducted a systematic literature review of community-based and participatory research in Alaska, USA, where social change has been rapid, having ramifications for social organization, and where participatory and community-based approaches are heavily advocated for by Alaska Native organizations. Conceptualizations of community and participation were extracted and analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively. The majority of articles showed a lack of critical consideration around both terms, although this was especially the case in reporting around community. While this lack of critical consideration could lead to issues of local elite co-opting research, an alternative interpretation is that Western sociological literature surrounding community is not transferable to Indigenous contexts.

Topics & Concepts

IndigenousParticipatory action researchSociologyCitizen journalismCommunity-based participatory researchCommunity studiesCommunity developmentEliteInterpretation (philosophy)Public relationsPolitical scienceSocial scienceEngineering ethicsEcologyPoliticsAnthropologyEngineeringComputer scienceBiologyLawProgramming languageIndigenous Studies and EcologyIndigenous Health, Education, and Rights