Examples of participatory action research tools
There are a variety of popular tools utilized in participatory action
research to analyze the local context. Below, some of them are analyzed in
their implementation during PAR trainings with some local organizations in the Bay
area of San Francisco, California, Asheville, North Carolina, and Chelsea, Boston area, Massachusetts. The main theme was “immigration reform” and
the local efforts carried out by local organizations to achieve that reform.
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Timeline
of resistance/oppression
Timelines are very useful to recover the recent history or resistance of
a community. The
procedure was the following:
Step 1: Form a group. Appoint a person as secretary and
as spokesperson, who then will present the group's work to the rest of the
participants.
Step 2: Ask the group which are the most important
historical events during the last 12 months related with immigration reform or
the movement in favor of immigration in California. Those events are divided
between facts of immigration repression and facts of resistance against that
repression. The Secretary writes the facts on a piece of paper.
Step 3: On a flipchart, draw a horizontal line like an
arrow in both directions. The events related with the history of
immigration-repression are written at the top of the arrow. The events related
with the history of immigration-resistance are written at the bottom of the
arrow. Try to identify the historical trends of each level with a dotted line.
Step 4: Finally, answer the following questions: What are
the lessons learned in that historical process? Lessons from the past: POSITIVE: Which year or group of years has
been more intense in terms of positive events? What conclusions can we draw
from that period? NEGATIVE: Which year or group of years has been more intense
in terms of negative events? What conclusions can we draw from that period?
Lesson for the future: What seems to be the tendency in the near future? What the organization can do to influence on
the current historical tendency in favor of the communities that it works for?
On the top of the timeline are listed the "immigration oppressive events"
(red) of the last year and half previous to this workshop (2013). At the
bottom, the "resistance events" (green) or organized actions against
that repression and in favor of immigration reform. Additionally, the dotted
lines indicate the tendencies through time. Thus, in both cases, repression and
resistance the tendency has been variable.
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The
social tree
The social tree is a very well known PAR analytic tool. Using the
metaphor of a tree´s structure and functions (roots: nutrients, trunk: structure, foliage:
breath). The procedure is as follows:
Step 1: Assign 2 basic roles: Coordinator (to guarantee everyone’s participation during the
discussion) and a note taker/spokesperson
(to document in writing and present the group's work).
Step 2: Using the social tree in the illustration describe
the meaning of each of the elements of the tree:
1. The roots:
the base of the social structure, its economic system. Economics has to do with
who owns what, the primary sources of income and economic productivity, how
people survive their conditions of life, and how economic resources are
distributed.
2. The trunk:
the social and political structure that makes the system run smoothly. It
regulates the system through laws, policies, and institutions. Also, it relates
to alternative use of power by social movements.
3. The
leaves/fruits: the ideological and cultural elements of society. This
includes beliefs and intuitions such as churches, schools and the mass media
(news & entertainment) that shape values, ideas, and norms.
Step 3: Divide participants into three sub-groups. Ask each
group to analyze a different element of the social system. Give them 20-25
minutes to complete the task, draw the social tree and then ask them to share
their work in plenary. Discuss each group´s analysis of how the different
aspects interrelate.
Step 4: Questions for group discussion:
1.
Which economic groups or
sectors and industries are in favor or against immigration reform?
2.
Which institutions,
political parties, associations, and organizations are in favor of immigration
reform and which are against?
3.
What values, messages,
cultural organizations, and mass medias are in favor of immigration reform in
the region and what values, messages and media are against immigration reform
in the region?
In the example above, the participants analyzed the dominant social
forces (on the right hand side) that oppose to immigration reform and the
progressive groups (on the left hand side) that support immigration reform
throughout the social structures. On the roots, the groups identified the
economic groups and organizations, on the trunk, the institutions and
organizations that sustain the local society and on the foliage, the
dominant and counter-cultural ideas, values, mass media and cultural
organizational from the region.
Social problems map, Chelsea, Massachusetts
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Social Problems Map
This a very useful tool to
analyze the social context and its social, economic, politic, and cultural
components, to identify the most pressing issues that affect a community and determine
the priority issues to be tackled in possible action plan. The procedure is as
follows:
Step 1: Assign 2 basic roles among the members of the group.
Appoint a person as coordinator (to
guarantee everyone’s participation during the discussion) and another one as note taker and spokesperson (to document
in writing and verbally present the group's work during the plenary sessions).
Step 2: Read the correspondent instructions (step 3 below)
for the work assigned to the group.
Step 3: List and classify the most relevant problems. Ask
the group, what are the most important economic, social (gender, class, racial,
ethnic, sexual orientation, age, and geographic location related), cultural,
and political problems that affect the communities in your region? Try to
classify the answers, if possible, by counties or specific places or
communities in the region. The note taker writes the problems in a piece of
paper.
Step 4: Locate the most important problems. On a large piece
of paper (usually, 6 flipchart sheets stuck together with tape), draw a map of
the region, distinguishing the different counties or localities in it. The map
does not have to be perfect. (It is not a competition or an art exhibition!)
What is important is the information collected and represented in the map.
Paste the color cards representing the different problems in its corresponding
location in the region (assign one color to each type of problem, e.g. red to
economic problems, black to political problems and so on). You could also draw
specific problems (funny drawings are allowed and encouraged to be done!). Try,
if possible, to identify certain patterns or characteristics within the region:
most impoverished localities, most politically conservative, most repressive
against immigrants or other minorities, etc.
Step 5: Prioritize and analyze. Prioritize the different
problems and identify the 5 most pressing problems of every category that the
communities can tackle in the future. Fill out the chart provided to the note
taker (just point out the challenges, but not in detail).
River of Life. NALACC. Chicago, Illinois
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The river of life
This PAR tool is oriented
toward the recovery of an organization or social movement history throughout
the years. Again, being a metaphor, every component is symbolic and it
represents different aspects of the organization/social movement´s evolution. The
procedure is as follows:
Step 1: Assign 2 basic roles among the members of the group.
Appoint a person as Coordinator (to
guarantee everyone’s participation during the discussion) and another one as Note taker and Spokesperson (to document
in writing and present verbally the group's work during the plenary sessions).
Step 2: Read the correspondent instructions (step 3 below)
for the work assigned to the group.
Step 3: The group compares the drawing of the river with the
process followed by the organization during the last ten years:
Facilitators:
clouds
and rain (factors that impulse
the emergence and growth of the organization), tributaries (alliances which fortify the organization), and trees (factors which permit the sustainability
of the organization)
Obstacles:
stones of different size or fallen trees in the river (context conditions that limit or prevent
at a different extent, the advancement of the organization plans); and the fire in the mountain (context threats)
Successful
actions: Waterfalls
(activities that create a stronger organization, good practices, good
management, and a greater impact on society, etc.)
Unsuccessful
actions: swamps, eddies (activities that undermine the organizations, failed projects, bad
policies, bad management, etc.)
Current
challenges (energy plant) and future proposals (the sea), hopes and dreams (the
sun)
Step 4: Analyze. Reflect on
the lessons learned from CPC’s evolution. What does this historical process
teach us? Conclude by identifying lessons learned and best practices
implemented by the organization during the process.
Step 5: Review the results with the
group. If the group is satisfied with the outcome, the work is ready to be
presented.
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