Interrogating Practitioner Tensions for Raising Citizen Voice with Participatory Video in International Development
Abstract
Within international development, strengthening the voice of citizens living in poverty is
recognised as vital to reducing inequity. In support of such endeavors, participatory video
(PV) is an increasingly utilised communicative method that can stimulate community
engagement and amplify the voice of groups often excluded from decision-making spaces.
However, implementing PV processes specifically within an international development
context is an immensely complex proposal. Practitioners must take into consideration the
different ways institutions may understand the use of participatory video for raising citizen
voice; and how therefore the practice may be influenced, co-opted or even devalued by
these institutional assumptions. To this end, this article interrogates how global PV practitioners express tension in their work. Analysis of their descriptions suggests six influential
views on PV practice with the potential to diminish the value of voice from the margins.
Publisher
Nordicom
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2015-04Author
Plush, Tamara
Editor
Thomas, Pradip Ninan
Keywords
participatory video
international development
citizen
voice
practice
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-91-87957-07-9
ISSN
1403-1108
Language
eng