Call for reimagining institutional support for PAR post-COVID

Jeremy Auerbach*, Solange Muñoz, Elizabeth Walsh, Uduak Affiah, Gerónimo Barrera de la Torre, Susanne Börner, Hyunji Cho, Rachel Cofield, Cara Marie Di Enno, Garrett Grady-Lovelace, Susanna Klassen, Veronica Limeberry, Aimee Morse, Lucy Natarajan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Although we believe academic researchers have a critical role to play in transformative systems change for social and ecological justice, we also argue that academic institutions have been (and continue to be) complicit in colonialism and in racialized, patriarchal capitalism. In this essay, we argue that if academia is to play a constructive role in supporting social and ecological resilience in the late stage Capitalocene epoch, we must move beyond mere critique to enact reimagined and decolonized forms of knowledge production, sovereignty, and structures for academic integrity. We use the pandemic as a moment of crisis to rethink what we are doing as PAR scholars and reflect on our experiences conducting PAR during the pandemic. A framework is presented for the reimaging of institutional support for the embedding of scholars in local social systems. We propose an academy with greater flexibility and consideration for PAR, one with increased funding support for community projects and community engagement offices, and a system that puts local communities first. This reimagining is followed by a set of our accounts of conducting PAR during the pandemic. Each account begins with an author's reflection on their experiences conducting PAR during the pandemic, focusing on how the current university system magnified the impacts of the pandemic. The author's reflection is then followed with a “what if” scenario were the university system changed in such a way that it mitigated or lessened the impacts of the pandemic on conducting PAR. Although this framework for a reimagined university is not a panacea, the reliance on strong in-place local teams, mutually benefiting research processes, and resources for community organizations putting in the time to collaborate with scholars can overcome many of the challenges presented by the pandemic and future crises.
Original languageEnglish
Article number916384
Number of pages16
JournalFrontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Volume6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Dec 2022

Keywords

  • participatory action research
  • academic capitalism
  • neoliberal university
  • scholar activism
  • COVID-19
  • Sustainable Food Systems

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