Drawing on a rich variety of participatory action research methods including ethnographic observation, artefact collection, focus groups, and interviews, this volume explores the transformational potential of development programs which actively involve marginalized groups. Foregrounding the experiences of women migrant workers in Beirut, the text reveals how direct participation in NGO-led, community programs and education empowers women to create counter-cultural communities and spaces for learning and activism. The text ultimately combines aspects of critical pedagogy, spatial analysis, and Third World feminisms to propose a critical subaltern praxis for research, development, and teaching. It will appeal to scholars and researchers with interests in research methods in education, migration, equality and human rights and the anthropology of education.
Author(s): Shireen Keyl
Series: Critical Ethnographic Research in Education
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 193
City: New York
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
1. Introduction: The Intersection of Migrant Domestic Labor in Beirut, Lebanon and the Development Sector
2. Understanding Critical Theory and Its Frameworks as It Applies to the Development Sector and NGO Work
3. Participatory Action Research at the Migrant Center
4. Subaltern Epistemologies, Part I: Stories of Oppression and Resistance
5. Subaltern Epistemologies, Part II: Articulating Agency, Power, and Empowerment
6. Education, Empowerment, and Activism in Beirut’s NGO Spaces
7. Critical Subaltern Pedagogy and Practice: The Ideology and Functionality of Beirut’s Migrant and Activist Communities
Index