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Session Type: Symposium
This symposium will critically examine emerging contradictions that show up when conducting Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) within institutions and social contexts that reproduce various forms of oppression. Using frameworks drawing from critical theories of race and whiteness as well as critical and transnational feminism, the symposium also offers examples of how you people and from marginalized backgrounds negotiate these tensions in ways that disrupt such oppressions. Calling into question how power dynamics operate within YPAR in diverse contexts, with particular attention to race and gender, the panelists consider the possibilities for liberatory praxes as well as the limiting constraints. The session will also draw on audience knowledge in a participatory format.
Solidarity, Power Asymmetry, and Collective Action: What Can Transnational Feminism Bring to Participatory Action Research? - Ana Carolina Fernandes de Bessa Antunes, University of Utah
"Maybe You Should Try It This Way Instead": Youth Activism Amid Managerialist Subterfuge - Kevin Lowell Clay, Rutgers University - Newark; David Charles Turner, University of California - Berkeley
Youth Organizing and Political Education as Critical to Addressing Contradictions in Youth Participatory Action Research - Julia A Daniel, University of Colorado - Boulder
Exploring the Role of Interest Convergence in Youth Participatory Action Research Within Traditional Institutions - Van T Lac, The University of Texas - San Antonio; Lisa Mendoza Knecht, The University of Texas - San Antonio
A Narrative Depiction of Navigating Civic Outcomes and Race Consciousness in Youth Participatory Action Research - Janiece Zalina Mackey, Young Aspiring Americans for Social and Political Activism (YAASPA)