Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Series Editors’ Foreword
- 1 Introduction: From the Regulation of Engagement to Regulating for Engagement
- 2 Co-Production as Experimentation: the Research Forum as Method
- Interlude: Community Researchers and Community Researcher Training
- 3 Beyond Prevent: Muslim Engagement in city Governance 49
- 4 Regulating for ‘care-ful’ knowledge Production: Researching Older People, Isolation and Loneliness
- 5 Who Gets to Decide what’s in my Fridge? Principles for Transforming the ‘Invisible Rules’ Shaping the Regulation of Food Habits in Urban Spaces
- 6 Life Chances: Thinking with art to Generate new Understandings of Low-Income Situations
- 7 The Making, Mapping and Mobilising in Merthyr Project: Young People, Research and arts Activisms in a Post-Industrial Place
- 8 Regulating Engagement Through Dissent
- 9 The role of Community Anchor Organisations in Regulating for Engagement in a Devolved Government Setting
- 10 Conclusion: Towards an Organic model of Regulating for Engagement
- Postscript: Engaging the University?
- References
- Index
Series Editors’ Foreword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
- List of Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Series Editors’ Foreword
- 1 Introduction: From the Regulation of Engagement to Regulating for Engagement
- 2 Co-Production as Experimentation: the Research Forum as Method
- Interlude: Community Researchers and Community Researcher Training
- 3 Beyond Prevent: Muslim Engagement in city Governance 49
- 4 Regulating for ‘care-ful’ knowledge Production: Researching Older People, Isolation and Loneliness
- 5 Who Gets to Decide what’s in my Fridge? Principles for Transforming the ‘Invisible Rules’ Shaping the Regulation of Food Habits in Urban Spaces
- 6 Life Chances: Thinking with art to Generate new Understandings of Low-Income Situations
- 7 The Making, Mapping and Mobilising in Merthyr Project: Young People, Research and arts Activisms in a Post-Industrial Place
- 8 Regulating Engagement Through Dissent
- 9 The role of Community Anchor Organisations in Regulating for Engagement in a Devolved Government Setting
- 10 Conclusion: Towards an Organic model of Regulating for Engagement
- Postscript: Engaging the University?
- References
- Index
Summary
Around the globe, communities of all shapes and sizes are increasingly seeking an active role in producing knowledge about how to understand, represent and shape their world for the better. At the same time, academic research is increasingly realising the critical importance of community knowledge in producing robust insights into contemporary change in all fields. New collaborations, networks, relationships and dialogues are being formed between academic and community partners, characterised by a radical intermingling of disciplinary traditions and by creative methodological experimentation.
There is a groundswell of research practice that aims to build new knowledge, address longstanding silences and exclusions, and pluralise the forms of knowledge used to inform common sense understandings of the world.
The aim of this book series is to act as a magnet and focus for the research that emerges from this work. Originating from the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council's Connected Communities programme (www.connected-communities.org), the series showcases critical discussion of the latest methods and theoretical resources for combining academic and public knowledge via high-quality, creative, engaged research. It connects the emergent practice happening around the world with the longstanding and highly diverse traditions of engaged and collaborative practice from which that practice draws.
This series seeks to engage a wide audience of academic and community researchers, policy makers and others with an interest in how to combine academic and public expertise. The wide range of publications in the series demonstrate that this field of work is helping to reshape the knowledge landscape as a site of democratic dialogue and collaborative practice, as well as contestation and imagination. The series editors welcome approaches from academic and community researchers working in this field who have a distinctive contribution to make to these debates and practices today.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Imagining Regulation DifferentlyCo-creating for Engagement, pp. xxiii - xxivPublisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2020