logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Explore, engage, empower: methodological insights into a transformative mixed methods study tackling the COVID-19 lockdown

Social Work

Explore, engage, empower: methodological insights into a transformative mixed methods study tackling the COVID-19 lockdown

L. Fritz, U. Vilsmaier, et al.

This transformative mixed methods study investigates the complexities of housing conditions and well-being during the first COVID-19 lockdown in Switzerland. Conducted by a team of researchers, it uncovers the challenges and benefits of engaging citizens in collaborative research under pressing circumstances. Discover how these findings could shape responses to future crises.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Action-oriented, transformative, and transdisciplinary approaches are increasingly heralded as promising tools that enable researchers not only to produce new knowledge about a situation, but also to actively engage in tackling it; however, such approaches raise critical questions about the methodological implications and conflicts involved in pursuing multiple objectives concurrently. This article seeks to advance this debate by examining the methodological implications of pursuing both knowledge production-oriented (epistemic) and action-oriented (transformative) objectives in urgent and uncertain situations. It asks how far a transformative mixed methods research design can leverage the potential of research to achieve multiple objectives in times of crisis. This methodological inquiry is based on a transformative mixed methods study on housing conditions and well-being which was initiated during the first COVID-19 lockdown in Switzerland. The study was composed of a country-wide survey, mobile crowdsourcing, interviews and Citizen Think Tanks. The results of this methodological reflection illustrate how this research design made it possible to (i) explore the effects of the crisis on domestic living spaces, (ii) engage with the crisis in a joint research space, and (iii) stimulate empowerment through reflection and mutual learning. These insights suggest the multidimensional orientation of the transformative mixed methods approach is appropriate for acting upon urgent crises. However, it challenges core methodological values and research constellations including (i) tackling unequal engagement opportunities, (ii) navigating social and epistemic control, and (iii) paying attention to situatedness and positionality. The article concludes that, in anticipation of future crises, favorable conditions for multi-targeted, collaborative research need to be fostered, both on the institutional and on personal levels. These conditions should enable fast and adequate team formation, as well as reflection and negotiation of positionalities, and divergent interests and objectives, of both scientists and citizens.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
May 17, 2022
Authors
Livia Fritz, Ulli Vilsmaier, Garance Clément, Laurie Daffe, Anna Pagani, Melissa Pang, Daniel Gatica-Perez, Vincent Kaufmann, Marie Santiago Delefosse, Claudia R. Binder
Tags
COVID-19
housing conditions
mixed methods
citizen engagement
well-being
transformative research
empowerment
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny