Critical Futures

Community-Engaged Research in a Time of Crisis and Social Transformation

A new book! Two members of the Research Group have contributed to this cutting-edge collection on community engagement, now available from the University of Toronto Press. We express deep appreciation to the editors, Stuart Poyntz, Am Johal, and Kari Grain—and to all the contributing authors. 

DESCRIPTION

Bringing together leading scholars, Critical Futures explores how community-engaged research can address social justice, decolonization, and transformation in response to contemporary crises.

Critical Futures explores the evolving landscape of community-engaged research (CER) in a time of unprecedented social, political, and environmental crises. This collection brings together leading scholars, community researchers, and activists to examine the intersection of CER with social justice, decolonization, and transformation.

The book explores the reimagining of CER and decolonizing research practices and offers case studies from the field. Through essays and contributions from a diverse group of scholars, the book highlights the need for ethical, equitable collaboration that transcends traditional academic hierarchies. It addresses topics including the role of solidarity in research, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on CER, Indigenous and Two-Spirit community research, and the critical importance of addressing power dynamics in university-community partnerships.

With a focus on justice and the creation of new collective possibilities, Critical Futures provides both theoretical frameworks and practical examples that inspire a rethinking of how community research can contribute to a more just and sustainable future. This collection is essential reading for anyone interested in the future of research that is rooted in social change and community engagement.

Chapters


Foreword 

Timothy K. Eatman 

Introduction: Crisis and Social Transformation in Community-Engaged Research 

Stuart R. Poyntz, Am Johal, and Kari Grain 

Part 1: Transformations, Complexities, and Critical Conversations 

Introduction: Reimagining Community-Engaged Research 

1. Pushing Against, Reaching Towards: Commitments, Contingencies, and Contestations in Community-Engaged Research and Practice 

Rubén Gaztambide-Fernández and Sarah Switzer 

2. Community-Engaged Research and the “Right to be Rural” 

Sean Markey, S. Ashleigh Weeden, Ryan Gibson, Greg Halseth, and Laura Ryser 

3. Money, Power, and Reciprocity: Financial Transactions and Critical Reciprocity in Community-Engaged Research 

Vanessa Fong, Kari Grain, Stuart R. Poyntz, and Amanda Wager 

4. How Community-Engaged Research and Learning Became “Work-Integrated Learning” (WIL): The Shifting Discourses of Canadian Experiential Learning 

David Peacock 

5. Relational Soil Care: A Community-Engaged Response to the Global Soil Crisis 

Katherine Lawless, David Janzen, and Ed Gregorich 

6. The Ethics of Care in a Pandemic: Weaving Together Anti-Racist Practice and Disability Justice in Our Community-Engaged Work 

Ciann Wilson and Natalie Kivell 

7. Your $20 Starbucks Gift Card Isn’t Helping: A Conversation about Community-Based Research as a Cooperative Undertaking 

Adam Gaudry and Matt Hern 

Part 2: Decolonization and Indigenization 

Introduction: Decolonization and Decolonizing Practices in CER 

8. Community-Engaged Research for Self-Determination: Decolonial Urban Strategies 

Lyanna Patrick 

9. Relational Accountability and Reconciliation in Two-Spirit Research and Education 

Harlan Pruden and Travis Salway 

10. The Elephant in the Room: Tokenism, Currency, and Dispossession in Community-Engaged Research 

Jessica Hallenbeck and Rosemary Georgeson 

11. “The Circle”: Circular and Relational Research in Response to Complexity and Crisis 

Sharon Karsten 

12. Decolonizing Community-Based Research: A Four-Quadrant Approach to Understanding the Impacts of COVID-19 on Elders and Seniors 

Crystal Tremblay, Tanya Clarmont, Lisa Mercure, Emily Dzyngel, and Katie Dzyngel 

Part 3: Case Studies and Field Perspectives 

Introduction: Case Studies from the Field 

13. Changing the System: Steps Towards Empowering Community Governance of Research Ethics in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver 

Scott D. Neufeld, Jules Chapman, Nicholas D. Leech (Crier), Samona Marsh, and Jim McLeod 

14. Art at Work and Workers as Artists: Project Thinking, Craft, and Creativity in Community-Engaged Research 

Will Garrett-Petts and Evelyn Asiedu 

15. Exploring Transformative Reciprocity in Community-Engaged Learning 

Rhianna Nagel, Alexandra Haupt, Kathy Sanford, Lilaine Galway, and Lisa Mort-Putland 

16. Learning in Public: Towards Critically Hopeful Practices in a CER Support Unit 

Elizabeth Jackson 

17. Seizing the Moment: Community-Campus Conversations to Support Communities Through and Beyond the Pandemic 

Lynn Gidluck, Amber J. Fletcher, and Magda Goemans 

18. Using Dialogic Methods and Tools to Identify Accessible Collaboration Pathways between Communities and Campuses: A Case Study with Ashoka Fellows and Changemaker Campuses 

Charmaine Lyn, Nicole Norris, and Jennifer DeCoste 

Conclusion: The Future of Community-Engaged Research 

Stuart R. Poyntz, Kari Grain, and Am Johal

Link to the book:  https://utppublishing.com/doi/book/10.3138/9781487550202


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