Learning from a Decade of the Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education Publications

Community-based Research with Marginalized Adults

Authors

  • Shauna Jane Butterwick
  • Suzanne Smythe Simon Fraser University
  • Jing Li University of British Columbia

Keywords:

community-based research, community-based learning, anti-oppression, meta-review

Abstract

Informed by critical feminisms, we undertook a cartography of publications in the Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education (CJSAE) from 2009 to 2019. We focused on two sets of publications: those that reported on community-based research (CBR) methods and those that aimed to address marginalization as a mode of oppression, with a particular interest in those articles in which CBR and marginalization intersect. Our explorations led us to reflect on important shifts in CBR reported in CJSAE in the decade of study, as well as persistent tensions surrounding the recognition of this research within mainstream academia. We also observed that the theorization of marginalization, and how this concept is taken up with respect to researcher positionality and the politics of research, requires more attention in adult education research. We interpret adult education research as an institution, a regime of truth (Smith, 1987) that opens and/or forecloses possibilities for social transformation, with implications for academic practices and the democratization of knowledge.

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Published

2021-11-10

How to Cite

Butterwick, S. J., Smythe, S. ., & Li, J. (2021). Learning from a Decade of the Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education Publications: Community-based Research with Marginalized Adults . Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 33(2). Retrieved from https://cjsae.library.dal.ca/index.php/cjsae/article/view/5633