Oral History and Arts-based Research with Peer Harm Reduction Workers

Abstract

This paper highlights an innovative and collaborative study aimed at amplifying the voices and experiences of harm reduction workers, known as peers, who work at the frontlines of the ongoing toxic drug supply crisis in British Columbia (B.C.), Canada. The project draws on community-based participatory research (CBPR) involves oral history and arts-based research methods. The project is timely and important because more than 32,000 people across Canada have experienced fatal overdoses since a public health crisis was declared in 2016. Peers play a critical role in helping to save lives and reducing harms in this unfolding situation that has affected virtually every community in Canada. The study engages 12 peers in frequent remote conversations and invites them to share details about work-related stressors, which include precarious employment, financial insecurity, and trauma as a result of continually witnessing fatal overdoses, and more. Students researchers who are artists are conducting graphic illustrations about peers’ testimonies. They are also conducting graphic-elicitation interviews with research collaborators. The purpose is to invite further dialogue and reflection about their work-related stressors and to share this knowledge and explore whether the methods allow collaborators to create nuanced knowledge about the overdose crisis.

Presenters

Aaron Michael Goodman
Faculty, Journalism and Communication Studies, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, British Columbia, Canada

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Civic, Political, and Community Studies

KEYWORDS

Oral History, Arts-Based Research, Communication Studies, Overdose Crisis, Harm Reduction