Author's School

Brown School

Author's Department

Social Work

Language

English (en)

Date of Award

5-22-2024

Degree Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Chair and Committee

Darrell Hudson

Abstract

Racism has multi-systemic impacts on African Americans resulting in longstanding racial health disparities. Increasingly, researchers use participatory research in their health equity efforts. Participatory research is rooted in the principle of empowerment and centers community lived experience to generate meaningful solutions while shifting conventionally held positions of power within research engagement and within systems more broadly. Yet the research literature on empowerment lacks consensus of its operationalization and measurement. What’s more, it is unclear to what degree existing frameworks of empowerment are derived from the communities they seek to engage and empower. Thus existing frameworks of empowerment could be strengthened by work that amplifies the experiential reflectiveness of African American communities. Given the deficiency in prior research to center African American participant voice and perspective, the current study used a Critical Race Theoretical approach to explore the empowerment experiences of African American participants in Community Cafès used to collaborate with their communities toward addressing risks associated with child abuse and neglect. The Community Café model is a civic engagement strategy that has been adapted to a participatory research method. The Community Café model is based on design principles to create an inviting, café-style setting that fosters constructive dialogue, collective intelligence, and culturally responsive possibilities for action. Using constructivist grounded theory methodology, the study conducted in-depth interviews with sixteen Café participants which yield five primary themes and five subthemes. These themes were then used to generate a set of six participatory research empowerment guideposts -PREGs for African American communities. PREGs signal a shift away from documenting deficits and risks and calls for researchers to center the African American experience with nuanced empowerment processes such as integrating discussions about racism and culturally reflective healing activities.

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Social Work Commons

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