Public Involvement and Community Engagement in Applied Health and Social Care Research: Critical Perspectives and Innovative Practice
The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online.

This edited collection brings academics, researchers and practitioners/public from a range of subject and discipline areas together with a view to providing insight into critical concerns and innovative practices on the process of developing and delivering Public Involvement and Community Engagement (PICE work) in a range of research settings.

Delivering powerful reflections and insights from professional groups, marginalised communities and people with lived experience as research partners/participants each chapter will present from “real life” illustrative practice examples and each will engage in a sympathetic critical appraisal of a concern or innovation. Chapters will also provide methodological, theoretical and practice insight into the process of PICE work and each will explore the implications and lessons that can be learned in and across different subject and discipline areas. It is important to recognize here that this is a collection of work that will call for intuitive and informed professional practice that creates space for individuals to reflect on their own practice (involvement) and how they consider, conceptualise, learn, manoeuvre, and position themselves in relation to “doing PICE work”.

Bridging a lack of knowledge and concern about the more critical and innovative aspects of PICE work in relation to representation, epistemic injustice, positionality, ethically informed and sustainable practice, this is pioneering reading for those who are the ever-pertinent issue of public involvement and community engagement in applied research practice.

1147711171
Public Involvement and Community Engagement in Applied Health and Social Care Research: Critical Perspectives and Innovative Practice
The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online.

This edited collection brings academics, researchers and practitioners/public from a range of subject and discipline areas together with a view to providing insight into critical concerns and innovative practices on the process of developing and delivering Public Involvement and Community Engagement (PICE work) in a range of research settings.

Delivering powerful reflections and insights from professional groups, marginalised communities and people with lived experience as research partners/participants each chapter will present from “real life” illustrative practice examples and each will engage in a sympathetic critical appraisal of a concern or innovation. Chapters will also provide methodological, theoretical and practice insight into the process of PICE work and each will explore the implications and lessons that can be learned in and across different subject and discipline areas. It is important to recognize here that this is a collection of work that will call for intuitive and informed professional practice that creates space for individuals to reflect on their own practice (involvement) and how they consider, conceptualise, learn, manoeuvre, and position themselves in relation to “doing PICE work”.

Bridging a lack of knowledge and concern about the more critical and innovative aspects of PICE work in relation to representation, epistemic injustice, positionality, ethically informed and sustainable practice, this is pioneering reading for those who are the ever-pertinent issue of public involvement and community engagement in applied research practice.

32.0 Pre Order
Public Involvement and Community Engagement in Applied Health and Social Care Research: Critical Perspectives and Innovative Practice

Public Involvement and Community Engagement in Applied Health and Social Care Research: Critical Perspectives and Innovative Practice

Public Involvement and Community Engagement in Applied Health and Social Care Research: Critical Perspectives and Innovative Practice

Public Involvement and Community Engagement in Applied Health and Social Care Research: Critical Perspectives and Innovative Practice

Paperback

$32.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on December 1, 2025

Related collections and offers


Overview

The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online.

This edited collection brings academics, researchers and practitioners/public from a range of subject and discipline areas together with a view to providing insight into critical concerns and innovative practices on the process of developing and delivering Public Involvement and Community Engagement (PICE work) in a range of research settings.

Delivering powerful reflections and insights from professional groups, marginalised communities and people with lived experience as research partners/participants each chapter will present from “real life” illustrative practice examples and each will engage in a sympathetic critical appraisal of a concern or innovation. Chapters will also provide methodological, theoretical and practice insight into the process of PICE work and each will explore the implications and lessons that can be learned in and across different subject and discipline areas. It is important to recognize here that this is a collection of work that will call for intuitive and informed professional practice that creates space for individuals to reflect on their own practice (involvement) and how they consider, conceptualise, learn, manoeuvre, and position themselves in relation to “doing PICE work”.

Bridging a lack of knowledge and concern about the more critical and innovative aspects of PICE work in relation to representation, epistemic injustice, positionality, ethically informed and sustainable practice, this is pioneering reading for those who are the ever-pertinent issue of public involvement and community engagement in applied research practice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781836086819
Publisher: Emerald Publishing Limited
Publication date: 12/01/2025
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x (d)

About the Author

William McGovern is Associate Professor at Northumbria University, UK.

Hayley Alderson is NIHR Advanced Fellow at Newcastle University, UK.

Bethany Kate Bareham is a Postdoctoral Researcher at Newcastle University, UK.

Monique Lhussier is Professor at Northumbria University, UK.

Table of Contents

Section 1. International, Regional, and Local Perspectives of PICE Work
Chapter 1. International community-involved LGBTQ+ health research: Multidisciplinary reflections and strategies; Sujith Kumar Prankumar, Loc Nguyen, Thisanut Kaewnukul, Lai Peng Ho, Randolph C. H. Chan, Kevin Dong, Muhamad Alif Bin Ibrahim, P. Arun Kumar, and Horas T. H. Wong
Chapter 2. Co-production of a regional approach to community engagement in health and care research in the North East and North Cumbria; Elaine Bidmead, Felicity Shenton, Greta Brunskill, Kate Whitmarsh, Sharon Barnes, and Steph Capewell
Chapter 3. From tokenism to trust: Transforming public engagement in local authority research and practice through health determinants research collaborations; Michael Johansen, Olivia Mullaney, and Hayley Alderson
Section 2. Creativity and Innovation, Perspectives and Opportunities in PICE Work
Chapter 4. Engaging with the theory and practice of creative PICE work; Ian Robson
Chapter 5. The World Cafe' approach: Partnering parents towards a deeper understanding of child transitions; Charmaine Agius Ferrante and James Stack
Chapter 6. Co-producing better mental health research with young researchers in educational establishments; Dave McPartlan
Chapter 7. Community asset mapping: An ethical, strength-based approach to co-production and inclusion; Kim Hall, Lydia Lochhead, Hayley Alderson, Monique Lhussier, Ruth McGovern, Zeb Sattar, Paul Watson, and William McGovern
Chapter 8. Applying a public health lens to co production with the military connected community; Paul Watson, Emma Senior, Robin Hyde, and Mark Telford
Section 3. PICE Work in Marginalised Communities
Chapter 9. Embedding trauma-informed principles within involvement and co-production activities with people experiencing homelessness; Emma A. Adams and Sheena E. Ramsay
Chapter 10. Co-production from the perspectives of people who have experienced homelessness; Monique Lhussier and Christina Cooper
Chapter 11. Collaborating to explore the reproductive health and social care needs of women who use drugs: A doctoral research study; Claire Smiles and Donna Kay
Chapter 12. A queer engagement: Navigating the twists and turns of public involvement and multiple marginalisation; Mark Adley
Chapter 13. ‘Tinkering with care’ in public involvement and community engagement with people with experience of problematic alcohol and/or drug use; Katherine Jackson, Emma-Joy Holland, Elizabeth Titchener, and Amy O’Donnell
Chapter 14. Co-production in refugee research: Navigating power dynamics; Fayrouz Al Haj Moussa and Claire Hart
Section 4. Parents-Carers-Adolescents and Children’s Perspectives of PICE Work
Chapter 15. Involving children and young people who experience parental substance use in research; Cassey Muir and Kira Terry
Chapter 16. Am I a carer? Avoiding research fatigue and labelling in health and social care research; Charlotte Lucy Richardson, Matthew Cooper, and David Black
Chapter 17. Let’s hear it from the girls: Shining a light on the value of PICE in alternative educational provision; Pamela Louise Graham and Melissa Fothergill
Chapter 18. The Young Dads Collective: Sustaining PICE through a qualitative longitudinal and participatory research programme; Anna Tarrant, Linzi Ladlow, and Laura Way
Chapter 19. Co-producing research with care experienced young adults and social work professionals; Emily R. Munro, Seana Friel, Amy Lynch, and CJ Hamilton

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews