Department of Criminology, Law, and Justice, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
J Community Psychol. 2022 Sep;50(8):3438-3454. doi: 10.1002/jcop.22845. Epub 2022 Mar 25.
Black women experience myriad challenges post incarceration, from managing stigma within social relationships to navigating surveillance when interfacing with service systems. It is these challenges that also make them vulnerable participants in community-based research. With many of potential research harms not falling under the guidance of Institutional Review Boards, it is critical to explore how communities experiencing stigma and surveillance perceive their engagement in research. As such, this study explores how 28 justice-involved Black women experience the research process. Findings reveal that participants view the research context as spaces for reflecting on surveillance and stigma in ways that promote self-recovery. Moreover, they perceive the interview process to allow them to envision identities as wounded healers who use their pasts as mechanisms to help others. The study's implications for anti-oppressive inquiry underscore the need for researchers to employ ethical care and justice frameworks that center compassion, reflexivity, and equity throughout the process.
黑人女性在监禁后会面临诸多挑战,包括在社交关系中应对污名,以及在与服务系统互动时应对监管。这些挑战也使她们容易成为社区为基础的研究的参与者。由于许多潜在的研究危害不在机构审查委员会的指导范围内,因此必须探讨那些经历污名和监管的社区如何看待他们参与研究。因此,本研究探讨了 28 名参与司法的黑人女性如何体验研究过程。研究结果表明,参与者认为研究背景是反思监管和污名的空间,这种反思以促进自我康复的方式进行。此外,他们认为访谈过程让他们能够将自己设想为受伤的治愈者,他们利用过去作为帮助他人的机制。这项研究对反压迫探究的意义在于,强调研究人员需要采用以同情心、反思性和公平性为中心的道德关怀和正义框架,贯穿整个过程。