Aligning Community-Engaged Research to Context
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Scale and Scope
1.2. Partnership Capacities and Resources
1.3. Sociopolitical Environment
1.4. CBPR Approach: Research Methodology, Collaborator Roles, Implementation Plan
2. Materials and Methods
- In what ways and to what extent did each project or initiative align with the scale and scope of its goals, with its capacities and resources, and with its sociopolitical environment?
- What were the processes involved in developing and implementing the CBPR approach?
- What were the implications of these approaches on the outputs and outcomes of the projects?
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Case Study 1: Exploring The Asthma/Obesity Connection in Response to Community Concerns (Harvard University)
3.1.1. Project Context: Partners, Roles and Implementation Process
3.1.2. Alignment of Project Scale and Scope
3.1.3. Alignment of Partnership Capacity and Resources
3.1.4. Alignment with Sociopolitical Environment
3.1.5. Synthesis: Alignment of Scale and Scope, Capacities, and Sociopolitical Environment
3.2. Case Study 2: Building Partnerships for Air Quality Research: Imperial County PM Study (UC Davis)
3.2.1. Project Context: Partners, Roles and Implementation Process
3.2.2. Alignment of Project Scale and Scope
3.2.3. Alignment of Partnership Capacities and Resources
3.2.4. Alignment with Sociopolitical Environment
3.2.5. Synthesis: Alignment of Goals, Capacities, and Sociopolitical Environment
3.3. Case Study 3. Preparing and Supporting Faculty for Community Engaged Research with Tribes: (University of Arizona)
3.3.1. Project Context: Partners, Roles and Implementation Process
3.3.2. Alignment of Project Scale and Scope
3.3.3. Partnership Capacities and Resources
- “Passive involvement” such as allowing graduate students and postdocs to participate in tribal community engagement, informational materials review, co-development of materials, educational activities and social media posts based on their research programs. For example, students from one lab assisted the CEC at an Earth Day event by learning and delivering lessons from NIH curriculum “Chemicals, the Environment, and You” [46]. They reached over one hundred Tohono O’odham students from five grades.
- “Active involvement” by researchers and lab staff, such as materials development on subjects requested by community partners, presentations to youth groups, and providing research internships to native students. One example of this was providing internships to six students from the Navajo Nation as they completed the KEYS High School Student Research Internship [47]. Researchers and lab students provide their time, talent, and treasure to the community engagement enterprise, providing real world supervision experience. Researchers express that such students reawaken their enthusiasm for the research initiative.
- “Direct engagement” with tribal members by researchers, such as science café discussions on topics requested by communities (and not necessarily their current research program), presentations and participation in tribal forums on health and the environment, providing advice and input to citizen science projects, and active partnerships with research program development with tribal communities based on the tribe’s research questions. A skin cancer researcher provided an introductory talk about how environmental hazards enter the body and subsequently cause cancer, providing basic information and answering community members’ questions. The community members who attend science cafés report that they now see scientists as approachable people who have important information to share.
3.3.4. Alignment of Partnership Capacities and Resources
3.3.5. Aligning with the Sociopolitical Environment
3.3.6. Synthesis and Lessons Learned: Alignment of Goals, Capacities and Sociopolitical Context
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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London, J.K.; Haapanen, K.A.; Backus, A.; Mack, S.M.; Lindsey, M.; Andrade, K. Aligning Community-Engaged Research to Context. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 1187. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041187
London JK, Haapanen KA, Backus A, Mack SM, Lindsey M, Andrade K. Aligning Community-Engaged Research to Context. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(4):1187. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041187
Chicago/Turabian StyleLondon, Jonathan K., Krista A. Haapanen, Ann Backus, Savannah M. Mack, Marti Lindsey, and Karen Andrade. 2020. "Aligning Community-Engaged Research to Context" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 4: 1187. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041187
APA StyleLondon, J. K., Haapanen, K. A., Backus, A., Mack, S. M., Lindsey, M., & Andrade, K. (2020). Aligning Community-Engaged Research to Context. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(4), 1187. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041187