Editorial
Dirty hands: Community engagement through practice as research
Social Alternatives, Vol.38(1), pp.3-4
2019
Abstract
Community engagement can be understood as a practice, an aspiration or a philosophy, and encompasses many forms and a multiplicity of processes. Despite the diversity of ways of seeing or doing community engagement it is always, at its heart, a collaborative endeavour which can lead to lasting change in communities. The role of creative practitioners in community engagement is often directed by disciplinary traditions and skills. However, those established ways of doing are undergoing a profound change: communities demand more agency in community engagement practices, and there is an increased need for demonstration of impact by funding bodies. At this moment of flux, researchers and creative practitioners within universities are designing research projects which attempt to support, consult and engage with community members in innovative ways to reimagine community engagement as a more focused, situated and cooperative process.
Details
- Title
- Dirty hands: Community engagement through practice as research
- Authors
- Lee McGowan (Author) - Queensland University of TechnologyDonna Hancox (Author) - Queensland University of TechnologyAlex Philp (Author) - Queensland University of Technology
- Publication details
- Social Alternatives, Vol.38(1), pp.3-4
- Publisher
- Social Alternatives
- Date published
- 2019
- DOI
- 10.3316/ielapa.340001531364962
- ISSN
- 1836-6600
- Copyright note
- Copyright © 2019 Social Alternatives. Reproduced with the permission of the copyright holder.
- Organisation Unit
- School of Business and Creative Industries; Australian Centre for Pacific Islands Research; University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland; School of Creative Industries - Legacy
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99518704602621
- Output Type
- Editorial
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