Abstract

A long‐standing challenge in community‐based participatory research (CBPR) has been to anchor practice and evaluation in a relevant and comprehensive theoretical framework of community change. This study describes the development of a multidimensional conceptual framework that builds on social movement theories to identify key components of CBPR processes. Framework synthesis was used as a general literature search and analysis strategy. An initial conceptual framework was developed from the theoretical literature on social movement. A literature search performed to identify illustrative CBPR projects yielded 635 potentially relevant documents, from which eight projects (corresponding to 58 publications) were retained after record and full‐text screening. Framework synthesis was used to code and organize data from these projects, ultimately providing a refined framework. The final conceptual framework maps key concepts of CBPR mobilization processes, such as the pivotal role of the partnership; resources and opportunities as necessary components feeding the partnership's development; the importance of framing processes; and a tight alignment between the cause (partnership's goal), the collective action strategy, and the system changes targeted. The revised framework provides a context‐specific model to generate a new, innovative understanding of CBPR mobilization processes, drawing on existing theoretical foundations.

Highlights

  • Community psychology, community development, social work, public health, and health promotion are fields of action and research that aim to transform the life and health conditions of individuals, groups, and populations (O'Neill & Stirling, 2006; Perkins & Zimmerman, 1995; Rappaport, 1981, 1987; Rootman, Goodstat, Potvin & Springett, 2001)

  • Drawing on a framework synthesis (Carroll, Booth & Cooper, 2011; Carroll, Booth, Leaviss & Rick, 2013; Dixon‐Woods, 2011; Oliver et al, 2008) of key Community‐based participatory research (CBPR) projects, this study aims to describe the development of a multidimensional conceptual framework building on social movement theories capable of drawing out identifiable elements of CBPR processes

  • Full‐text screening reduced the pool to eight papers, corresponding to eight specific CBPR projects that were included in this synthesis

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Summary

Introduction

Community development, social work, public health, and health promotion are fields of action and research that aim to transform the life and health conditions of individuals, groups, and populations (O'Neill & Stirling, 2006; Perkins & Zimmerman, 1995; Rappaport, 1981, 1987; Rootman, Goodstat, Potvin & Springett, 2001). These fields have a vested and inherent focus on social change (Lehrner & Allen, 2008), and build on approaches that emphasize critical investigation, empowerment, as well as transformative action (Maton, 2000; Minkler & Wallerstein, 1997). Recent reviews point to benefits of CBPR, including increased sustainability of project goals, the creation of unanticipated and spin‐ off projects, and the generation of policy changes and systemic transformations (Jagosh et al, 2012, 2015)

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