Article
Uniting Action Research and Citizen Science: Examining the Opportunities for Mutual Benefit Between Two Movements Through a Woodsmoke Photovoice Study
Action Research
Publication Date
9-27-2018
Document Type
Article
Abstract
As an emerging movement in participatory inquiry, citizen science presents an opportunity for advancing the disciplinary reach and usefulness of action research. In this article, we explore this opportunity by considering a case study involving youth-driven air sampling, photovoice, and environmental justice in the Pacific Northwest. When combined with photovoice as an action research method, citizen scientists can be empowered through collective learning to transform themselves from data collectors into builders of community knowledge and generators of policy change.
DOI
10.1177/1476750318798909
Publisher Policy
pre print, post print (12 month embargo)
Disciplines
Citation Information
Robin A Evans-Agnew and Chris Eberhardt. "Uniting Action Research and Citizen Science: Examining the Opportunities for Mutual Benefit Between Two Movements Through a Woodsmoke Photovoice Study" Action Research (2018) Available at: http://works.bepress.com/robin_evans-agnew/28/