2020
DOI: 10.1002/ajcp.12489
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Partnering With Oppressive Institutions for Social Change: Roles, Ethics, and a Framework for Practicing Accountability

Abstract: Community psychology is driven by the values of social justice, action, and accountability to oppressed groups, with a large body of literature devoted to understanding how to work in partnership with communities through participatory methodologies (e.g., community‐based participatory research, participatory action research). However, some community psychologists may work in partnership with oppressive institutions (e.g., the criminal justice system) in order to transform these institutions toward greater equi… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…This requires intentional reflection, deliberation, and willingness to learn from critique and criticism and carry that learning into action. There are inherent struggles between pragmatism and idealism, and between trying to identify, plan, and implement truly transformative changes versus ameliorative fixes (Javorka, 2020). At a minimum, we need universities to not hurt survivors-and as it turns out, that is harder to stop than one might expect, and, as such, our initiatives are shaped and perhaps limited by this reality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…This requires intentional reflection, deliberation, and willingness to learn from critique and criticism and carry that learning into action. There are inherent struggles between pragmatism and idealism, and between trying to identify, plan, and implement truly transformative changes versus ameliorative fixes (Javorka, 2020). At a minimum, we need universities to not hurt survivors-and as it turns out, that is harder to stop than one might expect, and, as such, our initiatives are shaped and perhaps limited by this reality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also knew that if we held back to protect our ability to make long-term changes, we ran the risk of collusion with an institution that continued to harm survivors, and in colluding, we risked harming survivors with our lack of action and advocacy. Javorka (2020) explored these challenges of collaborating with oppressive systems and recommended “developing an ongoing praxis of accountability [which] is essential if we want to transform [hierarchy-enhancing] institutions and address harms we are likely to unwittingly perpetrate through our involvement with them” (p. 10).…”
Section: Reflecting On Lessons Learnedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Community psychologists often work with and in existing systems; such work is often rife with tensions (Javorka, 2020). Eight of the articles in this VSI invoke ecological and systems thinking to understand and target change efforts in institutional environments, including the criminal and civil legal systems (Allen et al, 2013; Shaw & Lee, 2019; Shaw et al, 2016); the health care system (Allen et al, 2013; Campbell et al, 2010); institutions of higher education (Edwards et al, 2016; Holland & Cortina, 2017); and the military (Holland et al, 2014).…”
Section: Invoking Systems and Targeting Change In Institutional Envir...mentioning
confidence: 99%