Abstract

There is now widespread appreciation that children are capable of functioning as key protagonists of their own development, and that this capacity can be enhanced if they are afforded opportunities to participate in forms of inquiry that stimulate reflexivity amongst themselves and with outside researchers. There is likewise common acceptance that youth participation in research on issues that relate to their well-being can contribute to evidence-based knowledge that has multiple benefits. Rather more ambiguous, however, are questions concerning the nature of youth–researcher relationships and whether—or to what extent—youth participation in research can be characterized as a transformative process. Such questions are particularly salient in countries of the global South where the notion of youth participation tends to run counter to the persistence of hierarchical power arrangements, and where there are substantial socio-cultural differences between youth participants and professional researchers, many of whom are associated with international aid. This article addresses these questions by recounting a field study that engaged eight groups of youth living in rural communities and urban neighbourhoods in Senegal. Through processes of reflexivity that entailed analysis of issues they deemed to be socially problematic, and through subsequent dissemination of their analyses in narrative performances of their choosing, the youth attained a remarkable degree of project ownership. As a result, the field study also fostered a process of reciprocal learning among the participants and the researchers that contributed to the genesis of incremental transformations.

Highlights

  • Issue This article is part of the issue “Promoting Children’s Participation in Research, Policy and Practice”, edited by Jo Aldridge (Loughborough University, UK)

  • For policy-makers and organizations that provide services for youth, there is growing affirmation that the participation of young people in applied research and evaluation can contribute to stores of evidence that are useful for the direction or realignment of social policies and services (Theis, 2010; Tisdall & Davis, 2004)

  • While children’s participation in research is generally accepted by most social scientists and service providers who work in the fields of child studies and youth social programs respectively, in practice it is replete with challenges and constraints that relate to prevailing power arrangements (Christensen, 2004; Tisdall, 2016)

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Summary

Children’s Participation in Research

Since the promulgation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC, 1989) and the advent of a “new paradigm” in the sociology of childhood (Matthews, 2007; Prout & James, 1997), there is widespread acknowledgment that children and adolescents are social actors who possess unique cognitive and affective attributes. As Shier (2015) has observed, the participation of young people in research can lead to four distinctive forms of transformation: a) empowerment of young research participants, mainly through a process of reflexivity that arises from their engagement in inquiry, analysis and subsequent critical awareness; b) reflexive learning among those adults who work with and mentor youth researchers; c) transformation of attitudes among a broader population of adults regarding issues raised by young researchers; and d) social mobilization and community action that follow from these antecedent transformations Viewed in this light, social changes emanating from children’s participation in research and other discrete learning activities are far more likely to occur as a series of incremental stages rather than as precipitous forms of overt—and potentially risky—contestation against prevailing power arrangements. What follows is a synopsis of the stages of the project, and a discussion of the way it was conducted in relation to these questions

Reflexivity as Research: A Participatory Field Study in Senegal
The Underlying Dynamics of Shifting Project Ownership and Leadership
Findings
Project Aftermath: “Transformations” versus Social Transformation
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