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Volume 31, Issue 6: December, 2004
Abstract
*Ethical Challenges for the “Outside”
Researcher in Community-Based Participatory Research
Meredith Minkler, DrPH
Although community-based participatory research (CBPR) shares
many of the core values of health education and related fields,
the outside researcher embracing this approach to inquiry
frequently is confronted with thorny ethical challenges. Following
a brief review of the conceptual and historical roots of CBPR,
Kelly’s ecological principles for community-based research
and Jones’s three-tiered framework for understanding
racism are introduced as useful frameworks for helping explore
several key challenges. These are (a) achieving a true “community-driven”
agenda; (b) insider-outsider tensions; (c) real and perceived
racism; (d) the limitations of “participation”;
and (e) issues involving the sharing, ownership, and use of
findings for action. Case studies are used in an initial exploration
of these topics. Green et al.’s guidelines for appraising
CBPR projects then are highlighted as an important tool for
helping CBPR partners better address the challenging ethical
issues often inherent in this approach.
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