Identity politics: Participatory research and its challenges related to social and epistemic control

Date

2020

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

0269-1728
1464-5297

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Over the past 20 years the participation of laypersons or representatives of civil society has become a guiding principle in processes of research and innovation. There is now a significant literature discussing collaboration between civil society organisations (CSOs) and researchers, with two interesting gaps. Firstly, the fact that research is mainly conducted within projects is often underestimated, although the format significantly frames knowledge production. Secondly, is that researchers and civil society organisations are closely related to their respective communities. We argue that this constellation — of project-related format, in combination with a strong relationship to communities — results in conflicts that express and lead to identity politics. The analysis is based on conceptual considerations as well as empirical findings, which were developed within the EC-funded CONSIDER project (2012–2015). It can be shown that identity politics is performed by socio-epistemic tactics, which are used to order the socially as well as epistemically hybrid space within projects. To explain differences in conflict intensity, we suggest the distinction between weakly tied and strongly tied identity politics. In sum, identity politics can be seen as one key element for social as well as epistemic control in transdisciplinary research projects.

Description

The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

Identity politics, epistemic tactics, participatory research, research projects, transdisciplinarity

Citation

Böschen, S., Legris, M., Persdorf S., Stahl, B.C. (2020) Identity politics: Participatory research and its challenges related to social and epistemic control. Social Epistemology,

Rights

Research Institute