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Towards research with children: Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales

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Towards research with children: Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales. / Karlidag-Dennis, Ecem; Maher, Michael; Paterson-Young, Claire et al.
In: Global Studies of Childhood, Vol. 15, No. 2, 30.06.2025, p. 161 - 178.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Karlidag-Dennis, E, Maher, M, Paterson-Young, C, Cin, M & Giroletti, T 2025, 'Towards research with children: Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales', Global Studies of Childhood, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 161 - 178. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043610625134121

APA

Karlidag-Dennis, E., Maher, M., Paterson-Young, C., Cin, M., & Giroletti, T. (2025). Towards research with children: Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales. Global Studies of Childhood, 15(2), 161 - 178. https://doi.org/10.1177/2043610625134121

Vancouver

Karlidag-Dennis E, Maher M, Paterson-Young C, Cin M, Giroletti T. Towards research with children: Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales. Global Studies of Childhood. 2025 Jun 30;15(2):161 - 178. Epub 2025 May 17. doi: 10.1177/2043610625134121

Author

Karlidag-Dennis, Ecem ; Maher, Michael ; Paterson-Young, Claire et al. / Towards research with children : Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales. In: Global Studies of Childhood. 2025 ; Vol. 15, No. 2. pp. 161 - 178.

Bibtex

@article{7ee7cfd47c8a4a558f5b292e3dda6cf4,
title = "Towards research with children: Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales",
abstract = "This paper critically examines the use of the photostories method adapted from Photovoice in research with children, exploring its effectiveness in enabling decision-making and influencing change while addressing potential challenges. Specifically, it investigates the extent to which the photostories method enables children to make decisions and influence change while mitigating potential challenges, and how this contributes to a broader understanding of child participation in research. Using a reflective practice approach, the paper analyses researchers{\textquoteright} experiences alongside children{\textquoteright}s accounts to assess how this participatory method enhances child agency. The research was conducted in collaboration with two United Kingdom-based organisations supporting underrepresented children. Data were drawn from three sources: evaluation interviews with children (n = 18), researchers{\textquoteright} reflective diaries, and field notes recorded during the evaluation process. The analysis is grounded in reflective practice, considering both the implementation of photostories and the ethical complexities of working with children in research settings. Drawing on the frameworks of Lundy and Arnstein, the paper argues that power imbalances, ethical considerations, and safeguarding requirements mean that participation alone does not ensure full agency for children. This study critically examines who ultimately benefits from participatory methodologies that seek to amplify children{\textquoteright}s voices, while also contributing to ongoing discussions about how the research process captures children{\textquoteright}s lived experiences and shapes research outcomes.",
author = "Ecem Karlidag-Dennis and Michael Maher and Claire Paterson-Young and Melis Cin and Toa Giroletti",
year = "2025",
month = jun,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1177/2043610625134121",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "161 -- 178",
journal = "Global Studies of Childhood",
issn = "2043-6106",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards research with children

T2 - Assessing participatory methods in England and Wales

AU - Karlidag-Dennis, Ecem

AU - Maher, Michael

AU - Paterson-Young, Claire

AU - Cin, Melis

AU - Giroletti, Toa

PY - 2025/6/30

Y1 - 2025/6/30

N2 - This paper critically examines the use of the photostories method adapted from Photovoice in research with children, exploring its effectiveness in enabling decision-making and influencing change while addressing potential challenges. Specifically, it investigates the extent to which the photostories method enables children to make decisions and influence change while mitigating potential challenges, and how this contributes to a broader understanding of child participation in research. Using a reflective practice approach, the paper analyses researchers’ experiences alongside children’s accounts to assess how this participatory method enhances child agency. The research was conducted in collaboration with two United Kingdom-based organisations supporting underrepresented children. Data were drawn from three sources: evaluation interviews with children (n = 18), researchers’ reflective diaries, and field notes recorded during the evaluation process. The analysis is grounded in reflective practice, considering both the implementation of photostories and the ethical complexities of working with children in research settings. Drawing on the frameworks of Lundy and Arnstein, the paper argues that power imbalances, ethical considerations, and safeguarding requirements mean that participation alone does not ensure full agency for children. This study critically examines who ultimately benefits from participatory methodologies that seek to amplify children’s voices, while also contributing to ongoing discussions about how the research process captures children’s lived experiences and shapes research outcomes.

AB - This paper critically examines the use of the photostories method adapted from Photovoice in research with children, exploring its effectiveness in enabling decision-making and influencing change while addressing potential challenges. Specifically, it investigates the extent to which the photostories method enables children to make decisions and influence change while mitigating potential challenges, and how this contributes to a broader understanding of child participation in research. Using a reflective practice approach, the paper analyses researchers’ experiences alongside children’s accounts to assess how this participatory method enhances child agency. The research was conducted in collaboration with two United Kingdom-based organisations supporting underrepresented children. Data were drawn from three sources: evaluation interviews with children (n = 18), researchers’ reflective diaries, and field notes recorded during the evaluation process. The analysis is grounded in reflective practice, considering both the implementation of photostories and the ethical complexities of working with children in research settings. Drawing on the frameworks of Lundy and Arnstein, the paper argues that power imbalances, ethical considerations, and safeguarding requirements mean that participation alone does not ensure full agency for children. This study critically examines who ultimately benefits from participatory methodologies that seek to amplify children’s voices, while also contributing to ongoing discussions about how the research process captures children’s lived experiences and shapes research outcomes.

U2 - 10.1177/2043610625134121

DO - 10.1177/2043610625134121

M3 - Journal article

VL - 15

SP - 161

EP - 178

JO - Global Studies of Childhood

JF - Global Studies of Childhood

SN - 2043-6106

IS - 2

ER -