TY - JOUR
T1 - Working with community researchers to enhance rural community engagement around Private Water Supplies
T2 - an exploration of the benefits and challenges
AU - Creaney, Rachel
AU - Currie, Mags
AU - Teedon, Paul
AU - Helwig, Karin
N1 - Funding: CREW: Scotland's centre of expertise for waters; the Scottish Government's Strategic Research Programme (2016-2021).
PY - 2020/12/24
Y1 - 2020/12/24
N2 - This project employed community researchers as a means of improving
community engagement around their Private Water Supplies (PWS) in rural
Scotland. In this paper, we reflect on working with community
researchers in terms of the benefits and challenges of the approach for
future rural research that seeks to improve community engagement. The
paper (1) critiques the involvement of community researchers for rural
community engagement, drawing on the experiences in this project and (2)
provides suggestions for good practice for working with community
researchers in rural communities’ research. We offer some context in
terms of the role of community members in research, the importance of
PWS, our approach to community researchers, followed by the
methodological approach and findings and our conclusions to highlight
that community researchers can be beneficial for enhancing community
engagement, employability, and social capital. Future community
researcher approaches need to be fully funded to ensure core researchers
can fulfil their duty of care, which should not stop when data
collection is finished. Community researchers need to be supported in
two main ways: as continuing faces of the project after the official
project end date and to transfer their newly acquired skills to future
employment opportunities
AB - This project employed community researchers as a means of improving
community engagement around their Private Water Supplies (PWS) in rural
Scotland. In this paper, we reflect on working with community
researchers in terms of the benefits and challenges of the approach for
future rural research that seeks to improve community engagement. The
paper (1) critiques the involvement of community researchers for rural
community engagement, drawing on the experiences in this project and (2)
provides suggestions for good practice for working with community
researchers in rural communities’ research. We offer some context in
terms of the role of community members in research, the importance of
PWS, our approach to community researchers, followed by the
methodological approach and findings and our conclusions to highlight
that community researchers can be beneficial for enhancing community
engagement, employability, and social capital. Future community
researcher approaches need to be fully funded to ensure core researchers
can fulfil their duty of care, which should not stop when data
collection is finished. Community researchers need to be supported in
two main ways: as continuing faces of the project after the official
project end date and to transfer their newly acquired skills to future
employment opportunities
KW - Community researchers
KW - Lay researchers
KW - Private Water Supplies
KW - Participatory research
KW - Community engagement
U2 - 10.1177/1468794120978883
DO - 10.1177/1468794120978883
M3 - Article
SN - 1468-7941
VL - Online First
JO - Qualitative Research
JF - Qualitative Research
ER -