Co-Operative Inquiry
Research into the Human Condition
- John Heron - South Pacific Centre for Human Inquiry, New Zealand, South Pacific Centre for Human Inquiry, Auckland
September 1996 | 240 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
This is the first textbook to provide a comprehensive overview of cooperative inquiry--research with people in which the roles of researcher and subject are thoroughly integrated. Cooperative inquiry is a wide-ranging and distinctive form of participative research in which people use the full range of their sensibilities to inquire together into any aspect of the human condition. The purpose of Cooperative Inquiry is to offer both a detailed, practical guide explaining how to use the method. This includes:
The main ways of setting up inquiry groups
Different types of--and topics in--cooperative inquiry
Four principal kinds of inquiry outcome
How to develop three key methods of group development
The main stages of the inquiry cycle, highlighting key issues for practice
Special skills involved
Procedures for enhancing validity
Second, the book provides a broad theoretical background of cooperative inquiry in practice, including:
A history of the method
The underlying participative paradigm
Theoretical and political implications
The importance of a practical perspective
A critique of traditional research techniques
Cooperative Inquiry will encourage and empower students, practitioners, and researchers who are looking for powerful and empathetic tools with which to do social research.
Introduction
Research Method and Participation
Overview of Co-operative Inquiry
Initiating an Inquiry Group
Stages of the Inquiry Cycle
Inquiry Outcomes
Radical Memory and Inquiry Skills
Validity Procedures
Validity and Beyond
A Postconceptual Worldview
Arguments for Co-operative Inquiry