Affiliation:
1. Centre for Heritage and Culture, Institute for Resilient Regions, University of Southern Queensland, Australia
2. School of Psychology and Counselling, University of Southern Queensland, Australia
3. Surat Aboriginal Corporation, Australia
Abstract
Community-engaged research takes place at a complex social site that has both a history and a future as well as encompassing the project activities of the researchers and community members. We argue that a crucial methodological aspect of undertaking such research is the development of trust relationships between researchers and community. We propose that for each research project, this relationship can best be understood as a ‘sphere of engagement’, after Ingold’s ‘sphere of nurture’, and that trust and care are emergent and binding qualities of this sphere. Tracing the development of trust relationships in a case study, using the idea of security-based trust and harmony-based trust, we conclude that trust, and the related concept of care, bind together people, events, histories and futures beyond the dichotomous and time-delimited relationship of a research contract, and carry the sphere of engagement of researchers and community beyond the life of any one project.
Funder
Murray-Darling Basin Economic Diversification Fund
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
9 articles.
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