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Research Papers

Methodological challenges in researching activism in action: civil society engagement towards health for all

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Pages 386-397 | Received 13 Feb 2019, Accepted 26 Jul 2019, Published online: 12 Aug 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Civil society engagement around health care and population health improvement is an important driver towards Health for All. Research can improve the effectiveness of health activism by examining the resources, structures and strategies of civil society engagement. However, research to support such engagement faces epistemological and methodological challenges which call for specific research strategies.

A four year multi-country study was undertaken by the People’s Health Movement, a global network working for health for all. The research took place in six countries (Brazil, Colombia, DR Congo, India, Italy, South Africa) and globally, and was directed to understanding five domains of civil society engagement: movement building; campaigning and advocacy; capacity building; knowledge generation, access and use; and engaging with governance. The research plan and methods of data collection and analysis were tailored to address the objective of improving activist practice, while negotiating research challenges identified during the design phase.

Results include insights into the practice of civil society engagement in relation to the five domains of activist practice, as well as experience gained in managing six methodological challenges which we describe as: making meaning, aligning research and action, managing power relations, valuing experiential knowledges, chaos and contingency, challenging preconceptions.

Researching activism can produce useful insights into practice as well as support continuous improvement in the effectiveness of such activism. However, there are significant methodological challenges that can be addressed through appropriate strategies. More research, building on the approach described in this paper, can contribute to more effective civil society activism for health.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. For more information about the history and practices of PHM, please visit https://phmovement.org/building-a-movement-for-health/.

4. A preliminary report providing more information on these case studies can be found in the Final Report submitted to our funders (IDRC) and publicly available at: www.phmovement.org/cse4hfa .

6. See Patton (Citation1990), pages 422–428, for a more general discussion of interpretation and synthesis. Garrick (Citation2000) discusses interpretive analysis in relation to the subject whose knowing-in-practice is being reproduced. See Crotty (Citation1998), pages 87–111, for a useful discussion of interpretivism as hermeneutics.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Canadian International Development Research Center (IDRC) under grant number [107580-001].

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