The Impact of Co-production
eBook - ePub

The Impact of Co-production

From Community Engagement to Social Justice

  1. 248 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Impact of Co-production

From Community Engagement to Social Justice

About this book

Bringing together academics, artists, practitioners and 'community activists', this book explores the possibilities for, and tensions of, social justice work under the contemporary drive for community-orientated 'impact' in the academy.

Threading a line between celebratory accounts of institutionalised community engagement, self-professed 'radical' scholarship for social change and critical accounts of the governmentalisation of community, the book makes an original contribution to all three fields of scholarship.

Showcasing experimental research and co-production practices taking place in the UK, Australia, Sweden and Canada and within universities, independent research organisations and internationally prestigious museums and galleries, the book considers what research impact could look like for a wide range of audiences and how universities could engage with different publics in ways that would be relevant and useful, but may not necessarily be easily measurable.

Asking hard questions of the current impact agenda, the book offers an insight into emerging routes towards co-production for social justice.

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Information

Publisher
Policy Press
Year
2017
Print ISBN
9781447330288
Edition
1
eBook ISBN
9781447330325

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Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. List of figures
  6. Notes on contributors
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Series editors’ foreword
  9. Introduction
  10. ONE: Enabling conditions for communities and universities to work together: a journey of university public engagement
  11. TWO: Understanding impact and its enabling conditions: learning from people engaged in collaborative research
  12. THREE: Emphasising mutual benefit: rethinking the impact agenda through the lens of Share Academy
  13. FOUR: From poverty to life chances: framing co-produced research in the Productive Margins programme
  14. FIVE: Methodologically sound? Participatory research at a community radio station
  15. SIX: The regulatory aesthetics of co-production
  16. SEVEN: Participatory mapping and engagement with urban water communities
  17. EIGHT: Hacking into the Science Museum: young trans people disrupt the power balance of gender ‘norms’ in the museum’s ‘Who Am I?’ gallery
  18. NINE: Mapping in, on, towards Aboriginal space: trading routes and an ethics of artistic inquiry
  19. TEN: Adapting to the future: vulnerable bodies, resilient practices
  20. Conclusion: Reflections on contemporary debates in co-production studies
  21. References

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