Resources https://urbanresearchnetwork.org Urban Research-Based Action Network Thu, 08 Feb 2024 01:05:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://i0.wp.com/urbanresearchnetwork.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-URBAN.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Resources https://urbanresearchnetwork.org 32 32 New Special Issue on Collaborative Research for Justice https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/new-special-issue-on-collaborative-research-for-justice/ Tue, 21 May 2019 13:16:36 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64963 Read more…]]> EPAA/AAPE just published a new special issue:

Collaborative Research for Justice and Multi-issue Movement Building: Challenging Discriminatory Policing, School Closures, and Youth Unemployment, guest edited by Ronald David Glass and Mark R. Warren, with guest associate editors Lindsay Morgia and Ben Teresa  
 

Ronald David Glass, Brett G. Stoudt
 

Mark R. Warren, Ronald David Glass
 

Rachele Gardner, William M. Snyder, Ayda Zugay
 

Claudette Agard, Zakiya Ansari, Jerusha Conner, Barbara Ferman, Liza N. Pappas, Jessica Shiller
 
Brett G. Stoudt, María Elena Torre, Paul Bartley, Evan Bissell, Fawn Bracy, Hillary Caldwell, Lauren Dewey, Anthony Downs, Cory Greene, Jan Haldipur, Scott Lizama, Prakriti Hassan, Einat Manoff, Nadine Sheppard, Jacqueline Yates
 

Celina Su
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A Multi-Modal Interrogation of Collaborative Research for Justice https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/a-multi-modal-interrogation-of-collaborative-research-for-justice/ Sat, 09 Mar 2019 06:50:05 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64944 Read more…]]> This month’s special issue of Education Policy Analysis Archives (EPAA) was curated by URBAN, and edited by Ronald David Glass and Mark R. Warren. The issue, Collaborative Research for Justice and Multi-Issue Movement Building: Challenging Discriminatory Policing, School Closures, and Youth Unemployment, is a product of the first national URBAN conference. It reflects the network’s commitment to research for justice that combines rigorous scholarship with the arts to engage both the head and heart so as to deepen and express our social justice values in our scholarship. The powerful cases and provocative essays in the issue are integrated with videos and graphics that bring additional depth and nuance to the topics, and that challenge the hegemony of linear academic prose as the only way to engage with scholarly knowledge.

To watch the videos, visit our YouTube page HERE

Below are the six graphics from the issue. These graphics were created live during the national conference as a way of visually documenting the rich and complex conversations. The graphics were created by Paul Kuttner, co-chair of the new Utah node of URBAN.

Advocacy Rigor and Community Engaged Scholarship

Collaborative Research for Justice Practices

Ethics and Collaborative Research for Justice

Click HERE to watch a video commentary on this graphic

Institutional Supports and Collaborative Research for Justice

Policy and Collaborative Research for Justice

Situating URBAN and Collaborative Research for Justice

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New online public access journal on public scholarship https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/new-online-public-access-journal-on-public-scholarship/ Wed, 13 Feb 2019 18:15:00 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64942 The Assembly is an open-access, peer-reviewed, online publication housed in the School of Education at the University of Colorado Boulder — committed to democracy, diversity, equity, and justice in education.

For more info click here.

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New book, Lift Us Up Don’t Push Us Out! Voices from the Front Lines of the Educational Justice Movement is now out! https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/new-book-lift-us-up-dont-push-us-out-voices-from-the-front-lines-of-the-educational-justice-movement-is-now-out/ Thu, 06 Sep 2018 17:29:47 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64919 Read more…]]> Dear friends,

I’m delighted to announce that my new book, Lift Us Up Don’t Push Us Out! Voices from the Front Lines of the Educational Justice Movement is now out! It’s an anthology of essays by community organizers, education activists, and other movement builders lifting up their analysis, stories and strategies to build a renewed educational justice movement. Check it out at www.liftusupmovement.org[liftusupmovement.org]

Come join us online for livestreaming of our national book launch event September 11th 6:30pm at Busboys and Poets in Washington DC at www.liftusupmovement.org[liftusupmovement.org] .

Exam copies available from www.beacon.org[beacon.org]  and heavily discounted bulk orders by contacting Jennifer CanelaJCanela@beacon.org

Best wishes,

Mark

Follow us on facebook

Follow us on twitter: @liftusup_book

 

“Lift Us Up, Don’t Push Us Out! is a bold and exciting book that presents the stories we never hear — powerful stories of successful grassroots organizing in schools and communities across the nation led by parents, students, educators, and allies. The lessons we can learn from these inspiring activists and campaigns need to be spread far and wide.”

Karen Lewis, Chicago Teachers Union President

 

“Each one of the essays in “Lift Us Up” is a tour de force. You are captivated by the passion, the fury, the courage, the honesty, and the determination that is expressed so brilliantly by the writers, each who have found a way, by working arm-in-arm with others, to fight for educational justice for all children. I plan to assign this book to all of my students to bring the powerful and authentic voices of these parent and community movement leaders into my classroom.”

Karen Mapp, Senior Lecturer on Education at the Harvard School of Education

 

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“Community-Based Participatory Research through the Lens of Decision Science” by Michael Johnson https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/community-based-participatory-research-through-the-lens-of-decision-science-by-michael-johnson/ Mon, 25 Jun 2018 13:52:44 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64868
This is a brief introduction to community-focused and community-engaged research through the perspective of the decision sciences. It is intended as a complement to similar approaches more generally situated in the social sciences. You can access the post here here.
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2018 URBAN Working Papers https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/2018-urban-working-papers/ Wed, 20 Jun 2018 15:35:56 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64858 Read more…]]> “Towards New Ethics Protocols for Community-Based Research” by Celina Su & “Community Research Ethics in Red Hook” by Maddy Fox, Anna Ortega-Williams, Catherine McBride, and the Red Hook Initiative (access PDF here).

Abstract

The first piece, “Towards New Ethics Protocols for Community-Based Research,” serves as a brief introduction and templates for community-based research protocols, based on three different scenarios: 1) for researchers working with an established group or organization, 2) for researchers working with community members, and 3) for researchers who are just one of several (or many) researchers working with the same community. The second piece, “Community Research Ethics in Red Hook,” serves as a community response—one that articulates how Red Hook Initiative has developed strategies for negotiating research ethics and maintaining the power of local residents in relation to research. Together, we hope to prompt more sustained conversations, to collectively work towards research protocols that treat community members as participants and co-thinkers rather than subjects, and that achieve “clarity through specificity” on good practices for reciprocity and accountability.

]]> URBAN Special Edition – Journal of International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/urban-special-edition-journal-of-international-journal-of-qualitative-studies-in-education/ Fri, 13 Apr 2018 18:27:40 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64851 Read more…]]> URBAN special editionInternational Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education Volume 29, 2016 – Issue 10: Challenging Neoliberal Reforms through Collaborative, Community Engaged Research

Sarah R. HobsonSamara FosterDana WrightJoy HowardBernadette Doykos & Elizabeth Hudson

Abstract

Currently, neoliberalism serves as the foundation for the majority of educational reform efforts. Neoliberal approaches repeatedly privilege the value of ‘expert’ knowledge in framing policy and practice, resulting in limited opportunities for the impact of local community knowledge and experience on teaching and learning. While the neoliberal context narrows what counts as learning, participatory action research (PAR), youth-led participatory action research (YPAR), and engaged scholarship emphasize collaborative problem-solving among community organizations and schools that can expose the dangers of neoliberal trends in education. The articles in this special edition, titled ‘Challenging Neoliberal Reforms through Collaborative, Community Engaged Research,’ illuminate diverse approaches to collaborative research aimed at fostering a more inclusive, productive dialog regarding the impact and possibilities for educational reforms in K-16 schools. The authors identify the specific neoliberal reforms that shape their contexts, the nature of their collaborative research partnerships and methods, and the kinds of inroads their coalitions are making in altering harmful neoliberal policy implementations. Individually and collectively, the authors speak about new ways of framing the impact of neoliberalism on local communities. They provide alternative designs for educational policies.

Toward social movement activist research by Rhoda Rae Gutierrez et al.

The Refusal: teachers making policy in NYC  by Christine Brigid Malsbary

Institutional participation and social transformation: considering the goals and tensions of university-initiated YPAR projects with K-12 youth by Nicole Mirra et al.

Into our hoods: where critical performance pedagogy births resistance by Allyson Tintiangco-Cubales et al.

Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) 2.0: how technological innovation and digital organizing sparked a food revolution in East Oakland by Antwi Akom et al.

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European Journal of Operational Research special issue on community operational research https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/european-journal-of-operational-research-special-issue-on-community-operational-research/ Fri, 13 Apr 2018 15:37:52 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64849 Read more…]]> Hi colleagues,

I would like to share with you a link to the editorial for a special issue of the European Journal of Operational Research that I’ve co-edited with Prof. Gerald Midgley of the University of Hull, titled “Community Operational Research: Innovations, Internationalization and Agenda-Setting Applications”. The link for free access to the editorial is here[authors.elsevier.com], and is good through May 30, 2018.

In addition, there are two other pieces in the special issue I’ve co-authored that are open access and available to all: the lead piece, “What is Community Operational Research?[doi.org]”, and the final article, “Emerging Trends and New Frontiers in Community Operational Research[doi.org]”.

The entire special issue is available on the EJOR website at this link[sciencedirect.com]. I’m happy to share proofs of any other articles in the special issue that you would like. I welcome any questions and comments.

 

Sincerely,

Michael

Michael P. Johnson

McCormack Graduate School[mccormack.umb.edu]

Department of Public Policy and Public Affairs

University of Massachusetts Boston

Boston, MA 02125-3393

michael.johnson@umb.edu

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Special Issue: Building the Emerging Field of Collaborative, Community Engaged Education Research https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/special-issue-building-the-emerging-field-of-collaborative-community-engaged-education-research/ Tue, 10 Apr 2018 13:50:44 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64829 Read more…]]> Download the final pre-publication version of the articles here: Special Issue: Building the Emerging Field of Collaborative, Community Engaged Education Research

Guest Editor: Mark R. Warren

This special issue includes a set of articles designed to advance the theory and practice of CCES in education research and related fields. CCES has emerged across a range of disciplines and research domains, relying upon different methodologies and ethical frameworks, including participatory action research (Brydon-Miller, 2001), youth participatory action research (Cammarota & Fine, 2008), action research (Greenwood & Levin, 1998; Stringer, 2009), community-based research (Strand, Cutforth, Stoecker, & Marullo, 2003), and other forms of engaged scholarship (Saltmarsh & Hartley, 2011) like community-based participatory research (Minkler & Wallerstein, 2011). In this sense, we use CCES as an umbrella term across this variety of approaches. What unites this field, and distinguishes it from other attempts to link research to practice (Coburn & Stein, 2010), is its explicit attention to researchers working in partnership with community, parent, youth, and educator groups pursuing change agendas focused on increasing equity and justice in education (Oakes & Rogers, 2005; Warren, Oh, & Tieken, 2016). We do not limit our focus to research in educational settings; we include education-related research collaborations in community settings as well (Tate, 2012; Warren, 2005).

Co-Editors: John Diamond, Timothy Eatman, Michelle Fine, and Ronald David Glass.

Check out other articles from the special issue here.

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Defining and Conceptualizing Human Rights for Community-Engaged Research & Action by Arita Balaram https://urbanresearchnetwork.org/defining-and-conceptualizing-human-rights-for-community-engaged-research-action-by-arita-balaram/ Tue, 14 Nov 2017 19:36:13 +0000 http://urbanresearchnetwork.org/?p=64765 Read more…]]> Defining and Conceptualizing Human Rights by Arita Balaram

Inspired by conversations from our last national URBAN national conference, Defining and Conceptualizing Human Rights by Arita Balaram explores the utility of human rights language for community-engaged research and action. This work asks how we might situate local uses of the human rights approach within a global context, with opportunities to link social justice efforts and the communities fighting for justice together in solidarity.

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