*please excuse cross-postings * please forward to interested colleagues
Dear CANCHID colleagues,
We are writing with 2 time-sensitive announcements you may be interested in:
(1) Registration is open for these upcoming calls in the Educational Conference
Call Series on Institutional Review Boards and Ethical Issues in Research:
Call #5 - Beyond the University IRB: Understanding Alternative Models for Human
Protections, Part II: Creating an Independent Community IRB - When is it Right
for You?
Monday, May 24, 2007 from 12:00-1:30 pm pacific time
https://catalysttools.washington.edu/survey/ccphuw/33263
Call #6 - IRB Reform: Changing Policy and Practice to Protect Communities
Monday, June 25, 2007 from 12:00-1:30 pm pacific time
https://catalysttools.washington.edu/survey/ccphuw/33264
For more information on the series, and links to audiofiles and handouts from
past calls, visit http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/pastpresentations.html
(2) CALL FOR PAPERS on Ethical Considerations in Community-Based Participatory
Research for SPECIAL ISSUE of the Journal of Empirical Research on Human
Research Ethics - November 1 Deadline
Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is characterized by authentic
partnerships, meaningful community engagement, and community capacity building
that combine knowledge with action to achieve social change. These features of
CBPR raise ethical issues that differ from those encountered in traditional
human research. We are inviting papers which explore these ethical issues,
including from international perspectives. Contributions may include
qualitative or quantitative studies (including case studies and those involving
CBPR) and reviews of empirical literature.
Examples of possible topics include, but are not limited to:
*Ethical concerns encountered in CBPR and how these are addressed by CBPR teams
and/or research ethics committees (RECs)
*Models for characterizing ethical concerns encountered in CBPR and/or for
evaluating outcomes of alternate approaches to addressing these concerns.
*Approaches for increasing understanding of CBPR among RECs.
*Models of community ownership and control over data collection, interpretation
and/or dissemination.
*Community-based mechanisms for research ethics review, e.g., community
advisory boards, community-based research committees, community-based RECs.
This effort to contribute to a literature on evidence-based ethical problem
solving in CBPR grows out of a partnership established between Community-Campus
Partnerships for Health (CCPH) and the Tuskegee University National Center for
Bioethics in Research and Health Care (the Bioethics Center) to advance their
shared goal of meaningfully involving communities in decisions made about every
aspect of research. CCPH is a growing network of over 1,500 communities and
campuses across North America and increasingly the world that are collaborating
to promote health through service-learning, community-based participatory
research, broad-based coalitions and other partnership strategies. (See
http://www.ccph.info) The Bioethics Center was established in 1999 to promote
equity and justice in health and health care by conducting education and
training programs, fostering respectful community partnerships, advancing
interdisciplinary research, and advocating public policies that improve the
health and health care of all Americans, particularly the underserved. (See
http://www.tuskegee.edu/Global/category.asp?C=35026)
Please email manuscripts to [log in to unmask] on or before November 1,
2007. E-mail inquiries are welcomed; comments on outlines and draft
manuscripts will be provided upon request. Instructions on manuscript
preparation may be found at www.csueastbay.edu/JERHRE.
Special Issue Editors:
*Sarena D. Seifer, Community-Campus Partnerships for Health and University of
Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine
*Nancy Shore, University of New England and Community-Campus Partnerships for
Health
Consulting Editors:
*Vanessa Northington Gamble, Tuskegee University National Center for Bioethics
in Research and Health Care
*Jessica Grignon, Community-Campus Partnerships for Health
*Kristine Wong, Community-Campus Partnerships for Health
The Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics (JERHRE) is a
nonprofit, international, peer-reviewed journal published in print and online
formats. JERHRE is dedicated exclusively to empirical research on human
research ethics, including reviews and related methodological work. The basic
aim of JERHRE is to improve ethical problem solving in human research. JERHRE
is published by University of California Press, and appears online at
http://caliber.ucpress.net/loi/jer
The inaugural March 2006 issue is available free online at
http://caliber.ucpress.net/toc/jer/1/1
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Community-Campus Partnerships for Health promotes health (broadly defined)
through partnerships between communities and higher educational
institutions. Become a member today at www.ccph.info
Stay on top of the latest CBPR news and funding announcements! Join the free
CBPR listserv at http://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/cbpr
Celebrating a Decade of Transforming Communities & Higher Education, 1997-2007
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Access CANCHID archives at: https://listserv.yorku.ca/archives/canchid.html
plus CANCHID subscription management. CANCHID is a joint service of the Canadian Society for International Health < http:www.csih.org > and the Distributed Knowledge Project at York University. Queries to: [log in to unmask]
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