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      Kontext och deltagande kunskapsprojekt : - en kritisk reflektion

      Socialvetenskaplig tidskrift
      Linkoping University Electronic Press

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          Abstract

          Based on 20 years of experience involving marginalized singles mothers in participatory knowledge projects, this article provides a personal and critical reflection on the importance of the contexts within which such projects develop. Through concrete examples of projects, developed during different historical periods and welfare regimes, the author illustrates how the political and economic context can create both opportunities and barriers for the participation of the disadvantaged groups and the grassroots organizations that represent them. Some of the tensions too as benefits that can arise when more radical self-organized grassroots groups collaborate with academic institutions are also highlighted. Finally, ethical issues regarding the ideals of commitment of marginalized groups within a welfare context where the time to participate is regulated and limited raises. Consequently, it is argued, there is a need for wider critical reflection and continuous dialogue about how the basic principles of more radical traditions, both in research and social work, can be adapted and incorporated in new ways, whilst also learning from past experiences.

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          Most cited references14

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          Ethics in an age of austerity: Social work and the evolving New Public Management

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            The Difference That Power Makes: Intersectionality and Participatory Democracy

            This essay explores how developing more complex analyses of power and politics sheds light on important themes for both intersectionality and participatory democracy. Drawn from intersectional inquiry, Part I, “Hidden in Plain Sight: Hypervisible Power and Invisible Politics,” outlines three focal points of a provisional power analytic: (1) how analyses of intersecting, structural oppressions underpin systems of domination; (2) how a domains-of-power framework provides a set of conceptual tools for analyzing and responding to intersecting power relations; and (3) how a more robust analysis of the collective illuminates the political action of subordinated groups.
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              Ethical ‘mess’ in co-produced research: reflections from a U.K.-based case study

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Socialvetenskaplig tidskrift
                SVT
                Linkoping University Electronic Press
                2003-5624
                1104-1420
                March 05 2023
                March 05 2023
                : 29
                : 3-4
                : 269-284
                Article
                10.3384/SVT.2022.29.3-4.4670
                10293f01-f882-429d-bf6b-9bc130a2ec98
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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