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Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents

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Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents. / Gearty, Margaret; Marshall, Judi.
In: Systemic Practice and Action Research, Vol. 34, 31.08.2021, p. 441-462.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gearty, M & Marshall, J 2021, 'Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents', Systemic Practice and Action Research, vol. 34, pp. 441-462. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11213-020-09539-4

APA

Vancouver

Gearty M, Marshall J. Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents. Systemic Practice and Action Research. 2021 Aug 31;34:441-462. Epub 2020 Sept 10. doi: 10.1007/s11213-020-09539-4

Author

Gearty, Margaret ; Marshall, Judi. / Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents. In: Systemic Practice and Action Research. 2021 ; Vol. 34. pp. 441-462.

Bibtex

@article{5e5b29f1d6a348f0a57fa485975574a0,
title = "Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents",
abstract = "The practical orientation of action research, together with its embedded and participative principles, means it is particularly suited to complex, interconnected questions and {\textquoteleft}real life{\textquoteright} systemic issues. In the realm of first-person action research, Judi Marshall{\textquoteright}s (1999) influential article “Living Life as Inquiry” described how such research can extend to one{\textquoteright}s whole life whereby professional and personal questions can be set within politically relevant frames. Over the past two decades, many students and researchers have worked with and drawn much imaginative inspiration from the idea of living life as inquiry (LLI). However little has been written to describe how the practice develops and the many forms it can take. This article draws on our extensive experience as inquirers ourselves and as educators, working with students and change agents motivated to address social and environmental concerns. Twenty years after the original article we have conducted a reflective review that included surveying the literature, and working in depth with a range of stories and current practices. From this comes a textured expansion of the language and practice of living life as inquiry as it is approached from the specificity of people{\textquoteright}s lives. Through narrative and visual textures, we present views into the many different ways LLI is developed through day-to-day practices of experimentation, data gathering, artistic exploration, intervention and reflection. We explore what this means for quality in the enactment of inquiry. The article draws particular attention to the embodied nature of inquiry and seeks to capture its fleeting, processual quality.",
keywords = "Living life as inquiry, First-person action research, Self-reflective inquiry, Embodied practice, Systemic practice",
author = "Margaret Gearty and Judi Marshall",
year = "2021",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1007/s11213-020-09539-4",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "441--462",
journal = "Systemic Practice and Action Research",
issn = "1094-429X",
publisher = "Springer New York",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Living life as inquiry - a systemic practice for change agents

AU - Gearty, Margaret

AU - Marshall, Judi

PY - 2021/8/31

Y1 - 2021/8/31

N2 - The practical orientation of action research, together with its embedded and participative principles, means it is particularly suited to complex, interconnected questions and ‘real life’ systemic issues. In the realm of first-person action research, Judi Marshall’s (1999) influential article “Living Life as Inquiry” described how such research can extend to one’s whole life whereby professional and personal questions can be set within politically relevant frames. Over the past two decades, many students and researchers have worked with and drawn much imaginative inspiration from the idea of living life as inquiry (LLI). However little has been written to describe how the practice develops and the many forms it can take. This article draws on our extensive experience as inquirers ourselves and as educators, working with students and change agents motivated to address social and environmental concerns. Twenty years after the original article we have conducted a reflective review that included surveying the literature, and working in depth with a range of stories and current practices. From this comes a textured expansion of the language and practice of living life as inquiry as it is approached from the specificity of people’s lives. Through narrative and visual textures, we present views into the many different ways LLI is developed through day-to-day practices of experimentation, data gathering, artistic exploration, intervention and reflection. We explore what this means for quality in the enactment of inquiry. The article draws particular attention to the embodied nature of inquiry and seeks to capture its fleeting, processual quality.

AB - The practical orientation of action research, together with its embedded and participative principles, means it is particularly suited to complex, interconnected questions and ‘real life’ systemic issues. In the realm of first-person action research, Judi Marshall’s (1999) influential article “Living Life as Inquiry” described how such research can extend to one’s whole life whereby professional and personal questions can be set within politically relevant frames. Over the past two decades, many students and researchers have worked with and drawn much imaginative inspiration from the idea of living life as inquiry (LLI). However little has been written to describe how the practice develops and the many forms it can take. This article draws on our extensive experience as inquirers ourselves and as educators, working with students and change agents motivated to address social and environmental concerns. Twenty years after the original article we have conducted a reflective review that included surveying the literature, and working in depth with a range of stories and current practices. From this comes a textured expansion of the language and practice of living life as inquiry as it is approached from the specificity of people’s lives. Through narrative and visual textures, we present views into the many different ways LLI is developed through day-to-day practices of experimentation, data gathering, artistic exploration, intervention and reflection. We explore what this means for quality in the enactment of inquiry. The article draws particular attention to the embodied nature of inquiry and seeks to capture its fleeting, processual quality.

KW - Living life as inquiry

KW - First-person action research

KW - Self-reflective inquiry

KW - Embodied practice

KW - Systemic practice

U2 - 10.1007/s11213-020-09539-4

DO - 10.1007/s11213-020-09539-4

M3 - Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 441

EP - 462

JO - Systemic Practice and Action Research

JF - Systemic Practice and Action Research

SN - 1094-429X

ER -