Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach
Recent decades have seen a more thoughtful discussion regarding the inclusion of children and youth in research and decision making, challenging how we conduct child and youth-focused studies. Included is a focus on Youth Participatory Action Research approaches and how they facilitate engagement of...
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doaj-d1e4ab01eb024dcca2f539d8c8ae77a72021-02-16T17:58:23ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Qualitative Methods1609-40692020-06-011910.1177/1609406920934614Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis ApproachLinda Liebenberg0Aliya Jamal1Janice Ikeda2 Faculty of Graduate Studies, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaRecent decades have seen a more thoughtful discussion regarding the inclusion of children and youth in research and decision making, challenging how we conduct child and youth-focused studies. Included is a focus on Youth Participatory Action Research approaches and how they facilitate engagement of child and youth voice. Similarly, there is a smaller yet equally important questioning of how we understand “voice,” drawing attention to the conceptualization of “voice,” and the need to account for its social positioning and construction. Despite these various advances, current discussions focus predominantly on research design and data gathering, with an emerging focus on the dissemination of findings. Discussions focused specifically on data analysis remain limited. This omission seems important, given the bridge analysis forms between data gathering and dissemination of findings, and how this impacts youth engagement in the research process overall. By not considering more thoughtfully the ways in which children do or do not engage in the analysis of their data, how are we impacting the positioning of their “voice” in the findings? Similarly, how does our analysis unintentionally strengthen or undermine the platform from which youth share their findings, especially with those in positions of power? In response to these questions, we use this article to consider data analysis in relation to voice and subsequent knowledge production. We also share our approach to participatory thematic analysis in the Spaces & Places research project, a participatory action research program with Indigenous youth in three communities of Atlantic Canada. Through the discussion and exemplar, we hope to contribute to how researchers consider “voice,” ours and those of child and youth collaborators, and the ways in which we can account for both in the analysis process, and enhance the voices of children and youth as knowledge brokers in the dissemination that follows.https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920934614 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Linda Liebenberg Aliya Jamal Janice Ikeda |
spellingShingle |
Linda Liebenberg Aliya Jamal Janice Ikeda Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach International Journal of Qualitative Methods |
author_facet |
Linda Liebenberg Aliya Jamal Janice Ikeda |
author_sort |
Linda Liebenberg |
title |
Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach |
title_short |
Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach |
title_full |
Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach |
title_fullStr |
Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach |
title_full_unstemmed |
Extending Youth Voices in a Participatory Thematic Analysis Approach |
title_sort |
extending youth voices in a participatory thematic analysis approach |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
International Journal of Qualitative Methods |
issn |
1609-4069 |
publishDate |
2020-06-01 |
description |
Recent decades have seen a more thoughtful discussion regarding the inclusion of children and youth in research and decision making, challenging how we conduct child and youth-focused studies. Included is a focus on Youth Participatory Action Research approaches and how they facilitate engagement of child and youth voice. Similarly, there is a smaller yet equally important questioning of how we understand “voice,” drawing attention to the conceptualization of “voice,” and the need to account for its social positioning and construction. Despite these various advances, current discussions focus predominantly on research design and data gathering, with an emerging focus on the dissemination of findings. Discussions focused specifically on data analysis remain limited. This omission seems important, given the bridge analysis forms between data gathering and dissemination of findings, and how this impacts youth engagement in the research process overall. By not considering more thoughtfully the ways in which children do or do not engage in the analysis of their data, how are we impacting the positioning of their “voice” in the findings? Similarly, how does our analysis unintentionally strengthen or undermine the platform from which youth share their findings, especially with those in positions of power? In response to these questions, we use this article to consider data analysis in relation to voice and subsequent knowledge production. We also share our approach to participatory thematic analysis in the Spaces & Places research project, a participatory action research program with Indigenous youth in three communities of Atlantic Canada. Through the discussion and exemplar, we hope to contribute to how researchers consider “voice,” ours and those of child and youth collaborators, and the ways in which we can account for both in the analysis process, and enhance the voices of children and youth as knowledge brokers in the dissemination that follows. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406920934614 |
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