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Etnografía Institucional de Elicitación Visual×Investigación-Acción Participativa (IAP)×
CampoCualitativaCualitativa
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen2000s–2010s (integration period; IE roots ~1987, photo elicitation ~1967)1940s (Lewin); PAR as distinct tradition formalised ~1970s–1980s
Autor originalDorothy E. Smith (IE); Douglas Harper (photo elicitation); integration developed by feminist and critical ethnographers in the 2000s–2010sKurt Lewin (action research foundations, 1940s); systematised for participatory contexts by Orlando Fals Borda, Paulo Freire, and William Foote Whyte
TipoQualitative multimodal research designQualitative research method
Fuente seminalSmith, D. E. (2005). Institutional Ethnography: A Sociology for People. AltaMira Press. ISBN: 978-0759105010Kemmis, S., McTaggart, R., & Nixon, R. (2014). The Action Research Planner: Doing Critical Participatory Action Research. Springer. link ↗
Aliasphoto elicitation IE, visual IE, image-based institutional ethnography, visual data institutional ethnographyPAR, community-based participatory research, collaborative action research, participatory inquiry
Relacionados56
ResumenVisual elicitation institutional ethnography (IE) integrates photo or image elicitation techniques into Dorothy Smith's institutional ethnography framework. Participants produce or select photographs and other visual materials that represent their everyday experience within an institution; these images then anchor in-depth interviews that surface the ruling relations — texts, policies, and organizational discourses — that coordinate people's work and lives from outside their immediate standpoint.Participatory Action Research (PAR) is a qualitative, community-centred methodology in which researchers and community members collaborate as co-investigators to identify a shared problem, take deliberate action, observe outcomes, and reflect critically on results — cycling iteratively until meaningful change is achieved. Unlike conventional research that studies people from the outside, PAR treats participants as active agents who co-own the research process, the knowledge produced, and the practical interventions that follow.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Visual Elicitation Institutional Ethnography · Participatory Action Research. Recuperado el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare