TY - JOUR
T1 - Power, participation and their problems
T2 - a consideration of power dynamics in the use of participatory epidemiology for one health and zoonoses research
AU - Ebata, Ayako
AU - Hodge, Catherine
AU - Braam, Dorien
AU - Waldman, Linda
AU - Sharp, Joanne
AU - MacGregor, Hayley
AU - Moore, Henrietta
N1 - All of us received funding through the Zoonoses in Emerging Livestock Systems (ZELS) programmes, funded by the UK Department for International Development and Research Councils.
PY - 2020/4
Y1 - 2020/4
N2 - The use of Participatory Epidemiology in veterinary research intends to
include livestock keepers and other local stakeholders in research
processes and the development of solutions to animal health problems,
including potentially zoonotic diseases. It can also be an attempt to
bring some of the methods and insights of social science
into a discipline largely shaped by natural science methods and ways of
seeing the world. The introduction of participatory methodologies to
veterinary epidemiology and disease surveillance follows a wider
movement in development thinking, questioning the top-down nature of
much post-second world war development efforts directed from the Global
North towards the Global South. In the best cases, participatory methods
can help to empower the poor and marginalised to participate in and
have some control over research and interventions which affect them.
Compiled from experience in multi-disciplinary One Health projects, this
paper briefly traces the rise of participatory epidemiology before
examining some of the limitations observed in its implementation and
steps that might be taken to alleviate the problems observed. The three
areas in which the operationalisation of Participatory Epidemiology in
veterinary and One Health research could be improved are identified as:
broadening the focus of engagement with communities beyond quantitative
data extraction; taking note of the wider power structures in which
research takes place, and questioning who speaks for a community when
participatory methods are used. In particular, the focus falls on how
researchers from different disciplines, including veterinary medicine
and the social sciences, can work together to ensure that participatory
epidemiology is employed in such a way that it improves the quality of
life of both people and animals around the world.
AB - The use of Participatory Epidemiology in veterinary research intends to
include livestock keepers and other local stakeholders in research
processes and the development of solutions to animal health problems,
including potentially zoonotic diseases. It can also be an attempt to
bring some of the methods and insights of social science
into a discipline largely shaped by natural science methods and ways of
seeing the world. The introduction of participatory methodologies to
veterinary epidemiology and disease surveillance follows a wider
movement in development thinking, questioning the top-down nature of
much post-second world war development efforts directed from the Global
North towards the Global South. In the best cases, participatory methods
can help to empower the poor and marginalised to participate in and
have some control over research and interventions which affect them.
Compiled from experience in multi-disciplinary One Health projects, this
paper briefly traces the rise of participatory epidemiology before
examining some of the limitations observed in its implementation and
steps that might be taken to alleviate the problems observed. The three
areas in which the operationalisation of Participatory Epidemiology in
veterinary and One Health research could be improved are identified as:
broadening the focus of engagement with communities beyond quantitative
data extraction; taking note of the wider power structures in which
research takes place, and questioning who speaks for a community when
participatory methods are used. In particular, the focus falls on how
researchers from different disciplines, including veterinary medicine
and the social sciences, can work together to ensure that participatory
epidemiology is employed in such a way that it improves the quality of
life of both people and animals around the world.
KW - Infectious disease control
KW - Interdisciplinary research
KW - Participatory epidemiology
KW - Power relationship
KW - Zoonoses
U2 - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2020.104940
DO - 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2020.104940
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85082533394
SN - 0167-5877
VL - 177
JO - Preventive Veterinary Medicine
JF - Preventive Veterinary Medicine
M1 - 104940
ER -