Participatory Research for Environmental Justice: A Critical Interpretive Synthesis

February 1st, 2021 | RESEARCH

BACKGROUND: Environmental health risks are disproportionately colocated with communities in poverty and communities of color. In some cases, participatory research projects have eļ¬€ectively addressed structural causes of health risk in environmental justice (EJ) communities. However, many such projects fail to catalyze change at a structural level.

OBJECTIVES: This review employs Critical Interpretive Synthesis (CIS) to theorize speciļ¬c elements of participatory research for environmental health that eļ¬€ectively prompt structural change in EJ communities.

METHODS: Academic database search was used to identify peer-reviewed literature describing participatory research with EJ communities to address environmental health. Synthetic constructs were developed iteratively related to study characteristics, design elements, and outcomes; and data were extracted for included records. Statistical analyses were performed to assess correlations between study design elements and structural change outcomes. Through critical, comparative, and contextual analyses of the ā€œstructural changeā€ case study group and ā€œnon- structural changeā€ group, informed by relevant theoretical literature, a synthesizing argument was generated.

RESULTS: From 505 total records identiļ¬ed, eligibility screening produced 232 case study articles, representing 154 case studies, and 55 theoretical articles for synthesis. Twenty-six case studies resulted in a structural change outcome. The synthesizing argument states that participatory research with EJ communities may be more likely to result in structural change when a) community members hold formal leadership roles; b) project design includes decision-makers and policy goals; and c) long term partnerships are sustained through multiple funding mechanisms. The assumption of EJ community beneļ¬t through research participation is critically examined.

DISCUSSION: Recommended future directions include establishing structural change as a goal of participatory research, employing participatory assessment of community beneļ¬t, and increased hiring of faculty of color at research institutions. The power, privilege, and political inļ¬‚uence that academic institutions are able to leverage in partnership with EJ communities may be as valuable as the research itself. 

Document

Davis-ParticipatoryJusticeEHP6274.pdf

Team Members

Leona Davis, Author, University of Arizona
Monica Ramirez-Andreotta, Author, University of Arizona

Citation

Identifier Type: doi
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP6274
Identifier Type: issn
Identifier: 1552-9924

Publication: Environmental Health Perspectives
Volume: 129
Number: 2

Funders

Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: Advancing Informal STEM Learning (AISL)
Award Number: 1612554

Related URLs

Advancing Informal Environmental STEM Literacy & Learning: A Co-Created Citizen Science Rainwater Harvesting in Underserved Communities

Tags

Access and Inclusion: Ethnic | Racial | Low Socioeconomic Status
Audience: Administration | Leadership | Policymakers | General Public
Discipline: Ecology | forestry | agriculture | Health and medicine
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Community Outreach Programs | Public Programs