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Doing Community-Based Research

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Guidance on the community-researcher relationship, to support further scholarship and positive community change.
  • 15 June 2016
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Community-based research (CBR) offers useful insights into the challenges associated with conducting research and ensuring that it generates both excellent scholarship and positive impacts in the communities where the research takes place. This depends on two important variables: the capacity of CBR to generate good information, and the extent to which CBR is understood and constructed as a two-way relationship that includes a set of responsibilities for both researchers and communities.

Offering expert advice on the crucial relationship between communities and researchers, the authors outline the main stages of the CBR process to guide researchers and practitioners. They discuss the reasons for conducting CBR, provide tips on how to design research, and detail how researchers and communities should get to know one another, as well as how best to work in the field and how to turn fieldwork into research that counts. By focusing on the lessons learned from the use of CBR, the authors make the messages, lessons, and practices applicable to a variety of research settings.

Drawing collectively from decades of community-based research experience and including vignettes from researchers from around the world who share their CBR experiences, Doing Community-Based Research is an essential book for scholars, students, practitioners, and the educated public.

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Price: $39.95
Pages: 352
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 15 June 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780773547285
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SCIENCE / Earth Sciences / Geography
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"With its keen focus on lessons learned and direct field perspectives, this book adds a practical angle amid a theoretical backdrop to help make CBR methods accessible. For researchers considering a CBR framework especially in rural areas, the book's insi

“Effectively treading the line between prescriptive and illustrative, Doing Community-Based Research is appealing and easy to apply, retool, and retrofit for the instance at hand. It promises to be an excellent resource for implementing damage control, amongst both the studied and the students.” - Joy Parr, University of Western Ontario
Greg Halseth (Author)
Greg Halseth is professor of geography and Canada Research Chair in Rural and Small Town Studies at the University of Northern British Columbia.

Sean Markey (Author)
Sean Markey is associate professor in the School of Resource and Environmental Management at Simon Fraser University.

Laura Ryser (Author)
Laura Ryser is research manager in the Rural and Small Town Studies Program at the University of Northern British Columbia.

Don Manson (Author)
Don Manson is a community-based researcher and educator working with the communities and people of Northern British Columbia.