Building on the pioneering radical approach of Research Justice: Methodologies for Social Change—a seminal text born out of the innovative work of the Data Center: Research for Justice—this updated edition explores the nexus of research, power, and legitimacy, advocating for equitable knowledge construction.
Challenging traditional models, internationally recognized author Andrew J. Jolivétte offers a much-needed analysis of the intersections between Research Methods, Public Policy, Cultural Studies, Anthropology, Ethnic Studies, and Sociology. Complete with a new introductory chapter, the book champions diverse forms of knowledge, envisioning a future where cultural, spiritual, and experiential insights have equal impact on policy making.
Interdisciplinary and thought-provoking, this is a vital resource for scholars and students alike.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword to 2015 edition by Miho Kim Lee
Foreword by Mary Romero
Preface: Research Justice 10 years later
Part I: Research Justice: Strategies for knowledge construction and self-determination
1. Research Justice: Radical love as a strategy for social transformation – Andrew J. Jolivétte
2. Imagining justice: Politics, pedagogy, and dissent – Antonia Darder
3. Blurred lines: Creating and crossing boundaries between interviewer and subject – Amanda Freeman
4. Ethnography as a Research Justice strategy – Liam Martin
5. Queered by the archive: No More Potlucks and the activist potential of archival theory – Andrea Zeffiro and Mél Hogan
6. More than me – Nicole Blalock
Part II: Research Justice: Strategies for community mobilization
7. The socio-psychological stress of ‘justice denied’: Alan Crotzer’s story – Akeem T. Ray and Phyllis A. Gray
8. Formerly incarcerated women: Returning home to family and community – Marta López-Garza
9. Disaster justice: Mobilizing grassroots knowledge against – disaster nationalism in Japan – Haruki Eda
10. A health justice journey: Documenting our stories and speaking for ourselves – Alma Leyva, Imelda S. Plascencia, and Mayra Yoana Jaimes Pena
11. By us, not for us: Black women researching pregnancy and childbirth – Julia Chinyere Oparah, Fatimah Salahuddin, Ronnesha Cato, Linda Jones, Talita Oseguera, and Shanelle Matthews
12. Actos del corazón: Las sabias—bridging the digital divide, and redefining historic preservation – Cathryn Josefina Merla-Watson with the Corazones del Westside
Part III: Research Justice: Strategies for social transformation and policy reform
13. Everyday justice: Tactics for navigating micro, macro, and structural discriminations from the intersection of Jim Crow and Hurricane Katrina – Sandra E. Weissinger
14. The revolutionary, non-violent action of Danilo Dolci and his maieutic approach – Domenica Maviglia
15. Telling to reclaim, not to sell: Resistance narratives and the marketing of justice – Amrah Salomón J.
16. Decolonizing knowledge: Toward a critical Research Justice praxis in the urban sphere – Michelle Fine
17. Decolonizing knowledge: Toward a critical indigenous Research Justice praxis – Linda Tuhiwai Smith
Über den Autor
Andrew Jolivétte is Professor of Sociology and American Indian and Indigenous Studies at UC Santa Barbara.