Conflicting demands and the power of defensive routines in participatory action research
Abstract
Participation has been of ongoing interest in the field of action research and the New
Health Promotion movement, but it is not without tensions and problems. This article
presents the challenge of containing the conflicting demands of personal empowerment,
practical advancement and theory building in a community-based participatory action
research project ‘Aspiring to Healthy Living in The Netherlands’. A Participatory Action
Research (PAR) methodology was chosen because of its contribution to empowerment
of the community of older people, which was one of the project goals. Besides that, the
project aimed at the development of an intervention program for encouraging healthy
living amongst older people in The Netherlands and contributing to the knowledge base
on healthy living, by analyzing narratives from the participants. However, when time
pressure rose, the empowerment goal started to collide with academic and practical
aims, and the dialogue within the project team became obstructed leading to a return to
the traditional routine of applied research and the accompanying power relationships,
with implications for the learning in and about the project. This article starts with a
short review of the literature on community participation in health research and the
challenges of learning participatory action research, followed by a description of the
PAR project and the process of participation, using the ladder of Pretty as a tool to
highlight different levels of participation in different project stages. By using the theory
of organizational learning developed by Argyris and Scho¨n (Argyris, 1993; Argyris &
Scho¨ n, 1978), insights will be provided into the attempts of a relatively inexperienced
team to create a participatory and dialogic research project, and the problems in keeping
reflection and learning going within a context of external pressure.