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Release of CARE Study Funded by Indiana Minority Health Coalition

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE A Cross-Sectional Survey of Public Opinion toward the Affordable Care Act in Indiana CARE White Paper Series, 2012 Volume 1 Indiana Minority Health Coalition, Inc. 3737 North Meridian Street, Suite 300 Indianapolis, Indiana 46208 317-926-4011 www.imhc.org Contact: Troy Julian Gibson, Media Liaison troyjulian@gmail.com 317-797-7216 Indianapolis, IN, Thursday, August 9, 2012 – The Indiana Minority Health Coalition (IMHC) cordially invites you to attend the public release of the results of A Cross-Sectional Survey of Public Opinion toward the Affordable Care Act in Indiana. A study conducted by the Center for Culture-Center Approach to Research and Evaluation (CARE) at the National University of Singapore. The study was funded through an award to Purdue University by the Indiana Minority Health Coalition. In 2010, Indiana was among the leading states to incorporate aspects of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). This study was conducted

Worker with No Name

Worker with No Name Your name, hidden somewhere in the wood, cement, and scaffolding. Your dreams, erased from our public deliberations and analyses. Your desires, written over by Ours. July 17, 2012.

What does listening mean in CCA methodology?

I will share today an example of listening from our CCA grant on heart health funded by AHRQ. On this grant, we have a very strong community partner that has tremendous community presence. We also have a strong media partner that has done a fantastic job with the production of the content. Our team collectively has a lot of expertise at developing and running large campaigns and doing community-based work. In spite of all this expertise, one part of our community-driven work in one of the Counties hit a major roadblock because the media partner did not end up inviting the local leadership (state representatives, legislators, Black caucus, mayor's office) to our press launch in spite of being told consistently by the community organizer as well as by the Purdue team that this was very important. It turns out that one of the key leaders, a state representative, a champion of health inequities and health disparities work from the County called up our community partner and expressed h

Let the new Chapter begin: The startings of CARE

So July is here, and the move has finally been completed! After awaiting with excitement for all these months, saying our goodbyes to friends, collaborators, community organizers, community partners, and students at Purdue, we have finally arrived in Singapore, and are starting to settle in. So the work of the "Center for Culture-centered Approach to Research and Evaluation" (CARE) has also begun. This blogsite will gradually turn into the primary blog site for CARE, connecting the CARE projects with ongoing CCA projects elsewhere across the globe and gradually emerging into a resource for community members, community organizers, activists, policy makers, and program planners in engaging the culture-centered approach (CCA). As I consider the origins of the CCA, I go back to the inspirations for CCA that I had received from primarily reading the work of Collins Airhihenbuwa . Collins had written a book, " Health and Culture: Beyond the Western Paradigm " and I

Closing part of a Chapter...

It is only fitting that I write this note of goodbye on this CCA blog. Purdue. It is midnight and I am supposed to be working on giving feedback on Sydney's dissertation (which I am doing by the way in case you read this Syd as I write this blog). We had our farewell today. As with farewells, the evening was a reminder that my time at Purdue is coming to an end. It is also a time for me to take stock of all that for which I am grateful to Purdue. As I saw so many colleagues who had come to say their goodbyes, I also was reminded that I will not be seeing many of them again, at least not in the same space as a colleague in the same institution. So I wanted to write this note to say thank you to so many of them. My senior colleagues, Professor Stewart, Professor Webb, Howard Sypher, Glenn Sparks, Steve Wilson, Beverly Davenport Sypher, Patrice Buzzannell, Robin Clair, Felicia Roberts, Marifran Mattson, you taught me about excellence through your own work, through your comm

Participation and co-opting

1) Should sites of participation happen as Habermas suggested, with equal participants in a rational discussion, or as Bhabha suggested, through intersections of control and resistance? What would those sites look like? How can we create them? 2) Is is possible to un-co-opt an organizational space for resistance after the mainstream neoliberal (or other dominant structure) has co-opted it?

Thoughts on the tensions in participatory social change processes

This week’s readings center on the importance of participatory social change strategies, the inherent tensions, and its potentials for social transformation. In the opening section of Chapter 9 of Communicating Social Change, Dutta (2011) draws upon Habermas’s (1989) concept of “openness, dialogue, and inclusiveness” as important tenets in participatory social change processes. The assumption is that such openness creates equal opportunities for community members to deliberate on a relevant issue to them. Drawing from the dynamics in our Hunger and Food Insecurity Coalition community project thus far, I am wondering how inclusive a participatory social change process can be. For instance, there are active and passive community members in the coalition. At our last meeting for instance, community members suggested having a “face for their proposed campaign against stigma” often associated with the hungry and food insecure. According to the community members, such person must be vocal, p

Social capital and the horizons of change

1.) Given the centrality of social capital in participation, in what ways do we see social capital related to both the material and symbolic dimensions of inequality? 2.)   The debates between co-optation and social change, as well as the status quo versus structural transformation, have been discussed from various angles throughout the readings in recent weeks. Yet, what becomes the role for activists, scholars, and communities engaged in change efforts once desired changes have been met? Does change necessarily mean a move from margin to center, and if so, what new challenges arise from this relocation in social, political, and economic space?

Two-year post-doctoral research fellow positions at CARE-NUS

Two-year Postdoctoral Research Fellow Positions 15 July 2012 2 positions available immediately . Center for Culture-Centered Approach to Research and Evaluation (CARE) Department of Communication and New Media Faculty of Arts and Social Science National University of Singapore, Job Description: The Center for Culture-Centered Approach to Research and Evaluation is a project-driven center housed in the Department of Communication and New Media at the National University of Singapore that utilizes ethnographic and participatory action research methods in carrying out culturally-centered social change interventions in marginalized populations. The Center is global in scope with initial project emphases in South Asia and Southeast Asia. The goals of the Center are to (a) create a strategic research core for the social scientific study of health communication and social change issues in Asia (e.g. China, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand

Thoughts on Organizing for Social Change

In articulating organizing strategies for social change, Dutta (2011) discusses the role of resources in community organizing for social change. 1.Wondering how community or subaltern groups implement organizing campaigns when they have no access to resources. E.g., in circumstances when the dominant structures employ all tactics to prevent such groups from having access to resources. In other words, can large scale community organizing be effectively implemented or successful without financial support?What should the groups do when they are restrained from accessing any form of resources that will support social change processes 2.Also Dutta (2011) highlights the importance of information sharing in planning and implementing resistance projects. Given the censorship of information dissemination channels by the dominant structures, wondering how subaltern groups navigate information censorship

Organizing for Social Change

On pg. 238, Dutta mentions that "the increasing availability and use of the Internet as a communicative platform" has greatly helped activists to organize on an international scale. But in what ways can groups -- who are too marginalized to access the Internet either because of their lack of education or infrastructure or both or are too underprivileged to attend an international conference of grassroot-level activists -- get their voices heard on a global platform/forum? In a hypothetical situation, say, after a successful social resistance movement, when a resistive group comes to the table for negotiations with the structures, or powers to be, how do they decipher whether they are being coopted or not, since structures can operate in insidious ways?