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Community Engagement in Research Settings. Dr Jo Neary University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK. Scope of presentation. I will be referring to community engagement in terms of the research process, specifically how researchers understand, experience, and write about community engagement
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Community Engagement in Research Settings Dr Jo Neary University of Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Scope of presentation • I will be referring to community engagement in terms of the research process, specifically how researchers understand, experience, and write about community engagement • I will be using examples from research conducted in Africa and Asia, but also in Western Europe and North America
Overview (20 min presentation) • Definitions • What is meant by community • What is meant by community engagement • How does community engagement benefit our work • How has this been used in health, education, sustainability
Defining community • Lack of uniformity • Dependent on the nature of the research, goal of engagement, and context the research is carried out • The ‘population under study’ (Seely et al, 1992) • Or the group of individuals within a population who share common characteristics (Rotimi et al) • Who defines community? • More than the target population of the study, and includes wider populations also impacted (Morin et al, 2003)
What is community engagement • Can assist in identifying and clarifying communities understandings of research, and inform process • A dynamic process informed by input, and resulting in adaptive change by stakeholders and relationship transformation (MacQueen, et al 2014) • A process of working collaboratively with a group of people on a shared goal or common interest (Tindana et al, 2007)
Research projects and community engagement • Majority of community engagement in research settings occurs post-design stage (after ethical approval, funding has been given) • CE is therefore how we identify community need in the context of the research agenda • Where other topics come up, they may form the basis for future research • No ‘one size fits all’ strategy • Depends on nature of research and goals of engagement
Methods of community engagement • Different methods associated with community engagement • Creative methods for eliciting responses (arts based, visual mapping) • Arranging public forums, advisory panels, attending town meetings
Elements of community based participatory research • Collaborative • Involving community in all/some aspects of research • Building capacity and empowerment • Knowledge transfer and exchange • Meaningful engagement activities • Informing research agenda • Interpretation and dissemination of results
Examples of different types of engagement • Arts based approaches: study of designing a water filter intervention in Nepal (Aggett, 2018) using arts based approaches • Combination of methods: Study of orphaned and separated children in Western Kenya (Kamanda et al, 2013) using public meetings, stakeholders, and an expert forum
Common steps to community engagement • Meeting with community prior to research period beginning • Seek agreement as to research parameters, impact on community, consolidating needs of community with research objectives • Create advisory group with key stakeholders • Useful for recruitment, retention, links with ongoing experience of community • Constant feedback • Factor in meetings with community groups during research, feedback emerging results, seek their input as to meaning of data, also to ensure research can be appropriately applied
Points to consider • Practical guidance on community engagement: • Acknowledge capacity and ability of different stakeholders to participate • Acknowledge accessibility issues (location, time demands) • Ensure the purpose and goals of research is clear • Identify, mobilise and develop relevant attitudes • Provide space for dissenting opinions
Benefits of community engagement • Protect communities that are under investigation • Minimise possibility of exploitation • Ensure respect for recruited participants • Ensure awareness of, and respect for, cultural benefits • Increase the likelihood that research will generate benefits locally • Legitimacy of engagement process • Tailor research for needs of community • Longevity of impact • Learn from communities • Take into account local knowledge regarding social/economic/political landscape Adapted from MacQueen et al, 2015
Challenges in community engagement “Despite broad support; guidelines and scholarship regarding community engagement are unsettled which can make it difficult to implement and assess- potentially resulting in missed opportunities, wasted resources and poor decisions” (MacQueen et al, 2015)
Challenges in community engagement • Differences in demands of the community and that of the University • Is it to improve the quality of the research (and meet funding criteria) OR to have direct long lasting benefit to community • Focusing the engagement into a workable project • Differences in timeframe • Difficulties in evaluating effectiveness
Summary • Community engagement is becoming an increasingly common component of scientific research, development work, policy making, and technology design • However, what community engagement involves often depends on the research remitand often involves different activities • Overall, we say community engagement is participatory, empowering, and informing and may involve a one off discussion, or continual engagement over time • It is not without its challenges concerning evaluating effectiveness, dealing with different demands, or lack of trained staff • But can offer a lot of added value to research settings
Group Discussion • In your groups, consider: • What are the barriers facing Universities from engaging with local communities • What are successful examples of community engagement in Manila • What are the factors which facilitated successful engagement? • How transferable is this community engagement to other contexts either in the Philippines, or more globally?
Thank you Joanne.Neary@glasgow.ac.uk Website: SUEUAA.org Twitter: @SUEUAA2
References • MacQueen et al (2015) Evaluating community engagement in global health research: the need for metrics BMC Medical Ethics 16:44 https://bmcmedethics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12910-015-0033-9 • Kamanda et al (2013) Harnessing the power of the grassroots to conduct public health research in sub-Saharan Africa: a case study from western Kenya in the adaption of community-based participatory research (CBPR) approaches https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2458-13-91 • Agget (2018) Turning the gaze: challenges of involving biomedical researchers in community engagement with research in Patan, Nepal https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09581596.2018.1443203