Foreword ~ Miho Kim Lee;
Part One: Research Justice: Strategies for Knowledge Construction
and Self-Determination;
Research Justice: Radical Love as a Strategy for Social
Transformation ~ Andrew Jolivette;
Imagining Justice: Politics, Pedagogy, and Dissent ~ Antonia
Darder;
Blurred Lines: Creating and Crossing Boundaries between Interviewer
and Subject ~ Amanda Freeman;
Ethnography as a Research Justice Strategy ~ Liam Martin;
Queered by the Archive: No More Potlucks and the Activist Potential
of Archival Theory ~ Andrea Zeffiro and Mél Hogan;
More Than Me ~ Nicole Blalock;
Part Two: Research Justice: Strategies for Community
Mobilization;
The Socio-Psychological Stress of “Justice Denied”: Alan Crotzer's
Story ~ Akeem T. Ray and Phyllis A. Gray;
Formerly Incarcerated Women: Returning Home to Family and Community
~ Marta López-Garza;
Disaster Justice: Mobilizing Grassroots Knowledge against Disaster
Nationalism in Japan ~ Haruki Eda;
A Health Justice Journey: Documenting Our Stories and Speaking for
Ourselves ~ Alma Leyva, Imelda S. Plascencia and Mayra Yoana Jaimes
Pena;
By Us Not for Us: Black Women Researching Pregnancy and Childbirth
~ Julia Chinyere Oparah, Fatimah Salahuddin, Ronnesha Cato, Linda
Jones, Talita Oseguera and Shanelle Matthews;
Actos del Corazón: Las Sabias - Bridging the Digital Divide, and
Redefining Historical Preservation ~ Cathryn Josefina Merla-Watson
with the Corazones del Westside;
Part Three: Research Justice: Strategies for Social Transformation
and Policy Reform;
Everyday Justice: Tactics for Navigating Micro, Macro and
Structural Discriminations from the Intersection of Jim Crow and
Hurricane Katrina ~ Sandra E. Weissinger;
The Revolutionary, Non-Violent Action of Danilo Dolci and His
Maieutic Approach ~ Domenica Maviglia;
Telling to Reclaim, not to Sell: Resistance Narratives and the
Marketing of Justice ~ Amrah J. Salómon;
Decolonizing Knowledge: Toward a Critical Research Justice Praxis
in the Urban Sphere ~ Michelle Fine;
Decolonizing Knowledge: Toward a Critical Indigenous Research
Justice Praxis ~ Linda Tuhiwai Smith.
Andrew Jolivette is, Associate Professor and Department Chair in American Indian Studies, at San Francisco State University, where he is an affiliated faculty member in the Graduate Program in Sexuality Studies, the Doctoral Program in Educational Leadership, and in the Race and Resistance Studies Program. He is the author or editor of several books including Obama and the Biracial Factor: The Battle for a New American Majority (Policy Press, 2012). Jolivette is an international lecturer and public speaker with the Institute for Democratic Education and Culture (Speak Out).
"Research Justice is a powerful book presenting alternative research approaches that actively incite social change at micro and macro levels." International Journal of Social Research Methodology "A sharp reminder of the absence of political discourse and of the values of social justice." - Journal of Social Policy "Exquisite, contemplative and urgent examination of the ways we can implement more equitable, community-oriented research methodologies that amplify the voices and experiences of the historically marginalized and disenfranchised." Bonnie Duran, University of Washington "I would recommend it to anyone studying research methods or ethics." LSE Review of Books "As a long-time CBPR practitioner, I loved how Research Justice re-appropriates research as a space for love, reflexivity, cultural revitalization, community voice and power, and social transformation. Our imaginations are indeed inspired!" Nina Wallerstein, University of New Mexico
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