About this Research Topic
In times of crisis, whether interpersonal or communal, existing power imbalances based on gender and age, as well as other forms of identity, can be exacerbated—while the social mechanisms meant to mitigate abuses of power, such as women’s activists and movements, may be compromised or even under attack. This Research Topic explores feminist methodologies within research on violence, displacement, and power. It centers the experience of researchers from diverse backgrounds and what are classified as 'low- and middle-income countries,' who use feminist methodologies in their work to understand and challenge narratives around violence happening within their own communities, displacement and migration, and/or power imbalances and movements to rectify them. It shares examples of research that proactively acknowledges and addresses power imbalances between researchers and the affected communities with whom they interact. This collection hopes to start and build more engaging conversations that discuss the evidence from who suffers, the drivers, and effective risks mitigation, beyond development or global labels.
For this Research Topic, we are seeking contributions of original research, reflection articles, and case studies, with the central theme of using feminist methodologies to explore issues of violence, displacement, and/or power.
Sub-themes include:
• Multiplicity of methods: descriptions or examples of the methods used within a feminist approach, their strengths and limitations, and interactions with other methodologies (i.e. ethnography, participatory, grounded theory).
• Giving voice: as communications rapidly evolve, how has that affected the ways that research can give voice to women and girls' experiences? In what ways has this challenged or opened up space for new voices?
• Reflexivity and participation: narratives that describe lived experience as 'researchers' or 'researched.'
• Social action: the tension that can exist between activism and research, and seeking legitimacy within either of these.
This Research Topic is dedicated to Santi Kusumaningrum, our co-editor, who passed away on 9 July 2023 in Jakarta, Indonesia. Santi was the Director and Principal Investigator of PUSKAPA (Center on Child Protection and Wellbeing), a think-tank based at University of Indonesia. She was a brilliant, vibrant, empathic, funny, and incredibly impactful female scholar and activist who led Indonesia—and the world—in thinking about how to care for and protect children, while breaking down the systems and power structures that cause them harm. She cared deeply about mentorship and supporting the next generation of child protection scholars, in Indonesia and beyond. Despite having an incredibly busy and dynamic life, she shared her knowledge, networks, and time generously with many young researchers.
For those of us lucky enough to know Santi as a friend, colleague, mentor or collaborator, we mourn her tragic loss. May we all do justice to her memory and legacy, in the way we care for ourselves and others personally and professionally.
Keywords: Feminist, Conflict and disaster, Humanitarian, Power, Child Protection, Violence against women, Violence against children, Participation, Displacement, Migration, Social inclusion, Gender Injustice, Gender Inequality
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.