Researcher Positionality in Participatory Action Research for Climate Justice in Indigenous Communities

Kitagawa, K. (2023). “Researcher Positionality in Participatory Action Research for Climate Justice in Indigenous Communities.” International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 22. https://doi.org/10.1177/16094069231205178

Abstract: This paper discusses researcher positionality in the studies of indigenous communities in the context of the Transforming Universities for a Changing Climate project. The paper is specifically associated with the project’s participatory action research strand, which aims to design and implement interventions relating to mitigation and adaptation to climate change, involving local communities and universities in the countries. Despite an increase in the number of social scientists engaging in climate-change-related research, discussion on researcher positionality is still limited. The paper intends to fill this gap by analysing the empirical data collected from partner researchers who were asked about their own positionalities. Utilising the ‘four hyphen-spaces’ framework proposed by Cunliffe and Karunanayake, the paper identifies commonalities and variations in terms of the researchers’ reflections on their positionalities. The paper concludes by addressing the complex aspects of ‘insiderness’ that have implications for participatory action research.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.