4.3 Article

Reflections on Applying Institutional Ethnography in Participatory Weight Stigma Research with Young Women

Journal

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/16094069221100939

Keywords

institutional ethnography; participatory research; young women; weight stigma

Funding

  1. Edmonton Community Foundation
  2. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship
  3. IzaakWalton Killam Memorial Fellowship
  4. Children's Health Research Institute Graduate Studentship

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This article presents methodological insights from the application of institutional ethnography (IE) in Alberta, Canada to examine the challenges faced by young women in larger bodies. The researchers used principles of participatory research and conducted individual interviews and working group meetings to gather data. The findings suggest that IE is a pragmatic and flexible approach to public health research that keeps research participants in view.
Inspired by consciousness-raising practices of North American second-wave feminism, Dorothy Smith developed institutional ethnography (IE) as an alternative to established sociology, which she argued objectified people and their experiences. Instead, IE begins from an embodied standpoint to examine how local phenomena are coordinated to happen by ruling relations from afar. In this article, we present methodological insights from our experiences of applying IE, informed by principles of participatory research, in Alberta, Canada to examine the challenges young women (aged 15-21) in larger bodies face while navigating their everyday lives. We begin by exploring current discussions in the burgeoning field of IE, including how IE's social ontology aligns with participatory approaches to research. Contextualized by our public health backgrounds, we then describe how we used IE to study how the work of growing up in a larger body is socially organized, interpreting work generously as any task requiring thought and intention. Between March-December 2019, we conducted 14 individual interviews and facilitated 5 working group meetings with a subset of interview participants. Discussions during the working group meetings were structured by an adapted critical analysis framework to prompt participants in questioning taken-for-granted assumptions around weight and health. As part of this working group, we developed knowledge mobilization materials (infographics and an open letter) for parents, educators, and healthcare providers about how to navigate weight-related issues with young people, grounded in participants' experiential knowledge. We specifically reflect on how IE was a valuable tool for addressing four principles of participatory research central to this study: go beyond do no harm; provide opportunities for giving feedback; create space for critical engagement; and bring knowledge mobilization to the fore. Overall, our experiences suggest value in IE as a pragmatic, flexible approach to public health research, offering unique methodological tools which keep research participants in view.

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