Participatory politics of partnership: video workshops on domestic violence in Cambodia

insights from 4 participatory video workshops held in Cambodia as part of a project on domestic violence and legal reform

Abstract

In this paper the authors share insights from 4 participatory video workshops held in Cambodia as part of a 3-year project on domestic violence and legal reform under the ESRC/DFID Joint Fund for Poverty Alleviation Research scheme.

The participatory politics that emerged from the workshops organised in partnership with a Cambodian gender-oriented non-governmental organisation (NGO) and an independent translator/co-facilitator forms the crux of our discussion. ‘Participatory politics of partnership’ is defined as the multi-layered power relations between community groups, gatekeepers and researchers whose respective agency is mediated by the political economy the research emerges from, and takes place within. Highlighting discrepancies between ‘gold standard’ participatory ideals and practice, it is argued through 3 vignettes that greater acknowledgement is needed of intermediaries whose statuses and behaviours, like those of researchers, heavily mediate community engagement in participatory action research.

Citation

Garrett, B.; Brickell, K. Participatory politics of partnership: video workshops on domestic violence in Cambodia. Area (2015) 47 (3) 230-236. [DOI: 10.1111/area.12149]

Participatory politics of partnership: video workshops on domestic violence in Cambodia

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015