Participatory research for people's empowerment

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1999

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Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA)

Abstract

As new ways of linking knowledge with social change were being sought, participatory research emerged as an approach that questioned the distance between academic inquiry and people’s lived realities. This paper examines participatory research as an approach to knowledge creation that is closely tied to community involvement and social change. Drawing from field experiences, the research demonstrates how engaging people directly in the research process challenges traditional academic hierarchies and foregrounds the realities of the marginalized groups. By placing communities at the center, participatory research shifts the role of the researcher from being an external expert to a facilitator of collective inquiry and action. This approach generates new knowledge while building local capacity and solidarity, and identifying and implementing practical, contextualized solutions to pressing issues. At the same time, PR highlights the tensions between academic institutions that emphasize objectivity and technical expertise, and community groups that prioritize lived experience and immediate outcomes. Despite these differences, PR demonstrates its strength in bridging gaps between theory and practice, institutions and communities, and knowledge and action- making research a transformational process.

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Keywords

Participatory Research, Community Knowledge, Co-Construction of Knowledge, SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities, Region-Global

Citation

Prasad, B. Devi, & Rao, K. Visweswara. (1999). Participatory research for people's empowerment. Participatory Research in Asia (PRIA)

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