Comments on: The emergent tradition of participatory research in the social sciences https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/the-emergent-tradition-of-participatory-research-in-the-social-sciences/2009/08/16 Researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices Thu, 20 Aug 2009 04:30:55 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.15 By: Michel Bauwens https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/the-emergent-tradition-of-participatory-research-in-the-social-sciences/2009/08/16/comment-page-1#comment-417442 Thu, 20 Aug 2009 04:30:55 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=4448#comment-417442 A critique from John Heron, via email:

Thanks for alerting me to the article by David Hiles. I am visiting family members in the UK, but have managed to fit in a first quick reading.

From my perspective a fundamental weakeness of the paper is that Hiles attends exclusively to the epistemic wing of participatory inquiry, that is, to the nature of a researcher’s participatory knowing, and not at all to the political wing – which is about how subjects (who are being participatively known by a researcher) participate in the researcher’s decision-making about research topic, about research method, and about research conclusions – all of which purport to generate knowledge about the subjects.

Hiles gives an example of his own methodology of NOI Analysis used for counselling research. In his example, the method yields an account of how the subject “participates in his own construction of self”. But the account is obtained by unilateral researcher post-session analysis of the subject’s recorded story, not by co-creative mutuality of dialogue between counsellor and client.

Unless counsellors who are researching counselling are prepared to relate to their clients as co-creative partners in the inquiry process, their use of unilateral participatory knowing may become as sterile as the old positivist methods.

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