Making the most of youth development

Evidence-based programs and the role of young people in research

Authors

  • Kathryn Seymour Griffith University
  • Melissa Bull Griffith University
  • Ross Homel Griffith University
  • Paul Wright Griffith University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2017.17

Keywords:

Research-based evidence, policy, practice and funding, Queensland Youth Development Research Project, youth-inclusive research, research process

Abstract

There is a growing international emphasis on the use of research-based evidence to inform youth program policy, practice and funding priorities, and on involving young people as subjects and actors in gathering this evidence. Youth development organisations and programs increasingly are expected to engage in research that informs their program development and illustrates their effectiveness. Research partnerships that provide community access to external research expertise are one way by which youth organisations and programs can strengthen their internal research capacity. This article explores the youth-inclusive community–university partnership underpinning the Queensland Youth Development Research Project, and examines some of the multifaceted methodological and ethical dimensions of this approach across three dimensions of research: planning, doing and finishing. Successful youth-inclusive research requires paying attention to the diversity of challenges characteristic of youth research. These challenges, influenced by the complexity of child, young adult and older adult relationships, highlight the fundamental importance of understanding how power is expressed and mediated in youth research. Overall, the article argues that youth-inclusive research can be shaped to bring broader benefits to research, scholars, young people and the wider community beyond the aim of simply improving the research process itself.

Author Biographies

  • Kathryn Seymour, Griffith University

    Kathryn Seymour is an Adjunct Research Fellow at the Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University. She is also now working as a Senior Researcher at yourtown in Brisbane. Her recent PhD and postdoctoral work has focused on the Queensland Youth Development Research Project. She has published on gambling and homelessness, Indigenous education and informal education, youth research methodology and youth program good practices.

  • Melissa Bull, Griffith University

    Melissa Bull is Associate Professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Griffith University. Her research interests include illicit drug regulation, justice responses for drug-related offenders, punishment practices and community policing in culturally and linguistically diverse communities.

  • Ross Homel, Griffith University

    Ross Homel AO is Foundation Professor of Criminology at Griffith University. In the early 2000s, Ross helped to establish the Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth and its associated ARC research network. He has published three monographs and six edited books, as well as more than 150 peer-reviewed papers and numerous high-impact government reports. Ross has won many awards for his research on the prevention of crime, violence and injuries, and the promotion of positive development and wellbeing for children and young people in socially disadvantaged communities.

  • Paul Wright, Griffith University

    Paul Wright is a Brisbane-based independent researcher who worked in the community services sector for 28 years until 2012, mostly in youth services — shelters and peak groups, as well as network/peer learning support and youth crime-prevention services. While he was manager of Impact, a youth crime prevention service, he partnered with Griffith University to implement the Youth Development Research Project.

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Published

2017-06-01

How to Cite

Seymour, K., Bull, M., Homel, R., & Wright, . P. (2017). Making the most of youth development: Evidence-based programs and the role of young people in research. Queensland Review, 24(1), 147-162. https://doi.org/10.1017/qre.2017.17