Abstract

In this paper, I outline an innovative remote participatory video (PV) methodology that makes use of participants' smartphones. It was developed as an alternative to co-production research and can be employed when face-to-face contact is impossible or undesirable. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, face-to-face research interactions have been disrupted or become impossible. Yet it is vital to reach those who are most affected by emergencies and to include their voices. The research reported here was a collaboration between women in Medellín, Colombia, and a team of filmmakers and researchers. We developed an innovative remote PV methodology using participants' smartphones, researching how women from poorer neighbourhoods were affected by the pandemic in their everyday lives. Here, I reflect on the strengths and weaknesses of the remote PV methodology, arguing that it offers new avenues for participants to take control of the filming and editing process, and builds technical skills and capacities that have value beyond the timeframe of the project. I conclude that the remote PV method has great potential as a stand-alone method, moving the landscape of co-production research away from a requirement for geographical co-presence and potentially shifting power and ownership towards local co-researchers and participants.

Highlights

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted face-to-face research projects worldwide, with restrictions on travel and social contact introduced to avoid further health risks

  • This new fieldwork landscape leads many researchers to seek alternative ways to start or continue their data collection and sometimes prompts them to change previously planned research designs (Howlett, 2021). One solution in this new fieldwork landscape, and which still permits the co-production of knowledge at a time of upheaval, is the use of smartphones to collect and share audio and visual material as well as written data

  • In response to the disruption brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, we developed an innovative remote participatory video (PV) method using participants’ smartphones

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Summary

Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted face-to-face research projects worldwide, with restrictions on travel and social contact introduced to avoid further health risks. We had to find innovative ways of creating this one screen for collaborative editing activities in an online environment and to ensure that we shifted the selection of the videos for the final film into the hands of the women.

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