'Girls have powers': using research-led arts to connect policymaking with girls' lived experiences in Uganda
Loading...
Date
2021-05
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Abstract
Abstract
This article offers new methodological directions for generating difficult-to-capture evidence on the hidden dimensions of young people's lives in challenging circumstances. We explore how research-led applied arts can advance participatory methodologies to bridge the gap that often exists between participatory research engaging girls meaningfully within the research process, and knowledge exchange processes that connect policy-making with their lived experiences. We demonstrate how this innovative approach, embedded within a girlhood studies framework, amplifies the voices of those marginalised by gender and age in urban settings. It co-creates the (safe) spaces, resources and tools to recognise, explore and intervene against systemic inequalities and injustices. Research-led applied arts provide mechanisms for messaging girls' concerns and perspectives in a non-threatening manner directly to those with the power to address them. Such situated knowledge exchange is crucial if we are to sustainably challenge inequitable gender regimes in ways that respond directly to the everyday challenges faced by girls in developing contexts.
Description
Keywords
Applied arts, participatory methods Uganda, urban, youth
Citation
McQuaid, Katie, Robert M. Vanderbeck, and Lillian Mbabazi. ''Girls have Powers': Using Research-Led Arts to Connect Policymaking with Girls' Lived Experiences in Uganda', Gender, Place and Culture : A Journal of Feminist Geography, vol. 28/no. 5, (2021), pp. 605-626.