TY - JOUR
T1 - Cultivating hybrid collectives : research methods for enacting community food economies in Australia and the Philippines
AU - Cameron, Jenny
AU - Gibson, Katherine
AU - Hill, Ann
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Across the globe, groups are experimenting with initiatives to create alternatives to the dominant food system. What role might research play in helping to strengthen and multiply these initiatives? In this paper we discuss two research projects in Australia and the Philippines in which we have cultivated hybrid collectives of academic researchers, lay researchers and various non-human others with the intention of enacting community food economies. We feature three critical interactions in the “hybrid collective research method”: gathering, which brings together those who share concerns about community food economies; reassembling, in which material gathered is deliberatively rebundled to amplify particular insights; and translating, by which reassembled ideas are taken up by other collectives so they may continue to “do work”. We argue that in a climate-changing world, the hybrid collective research method fosters opportunities for a range of human and non-human participants to act in concert to build community food economies.
AB - Across the globe, groups are experimenting with initiatives to create alternatives to the dominant food system. What role might research play in helping to strengthen and multiply these initiatives? In this paper we discuss two research projects in Australia and the Philippines in which we have cultivated hybrid collectives of academic researchers, lay researchers and various non-human others with the intention of enacting community food economies. We feature three critical interactions in the “hybrid collective research method”: gathering, which brings together those who share concerns about community food economies; reassembling, in which material gathered is deliberatively rebundled to amplify particular insights; and translating, by which reassembled ideas are taken up by other collectives so they may continue to “do work”. We argue that in a climate-changing world, the hybrid collective research method fosters opportunities for a range of human and non-human participants to act in concert to build community food economies.
KW - Australia
KW - Philippines
KW - action research
KW - research methods
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:29120
U2 - 10.1080/13549839.2013.855892
DO - 10.1080/13549839.2013.855892
M3 - Article
SN - 1354-9839
VL - 19
SP - 118
EP - 132
JO - Local Environment: the international journal of justice and sustainability
JF - Local Environment: the international journal of justice and sustainability
IS - 1
ER -