TY - JOUR
T1 - Dignity-based practice in global health research
T2 - a framework of expectations
AU - Bayingana, Alice
AU - Bhakuni, Himani
AU - van de Kamp, Judith
AU - Lariat, Joni
AU - Rathod, Lekha
AU - van der Graaf, Rieke
AU - Abimbola, Seye
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Global health research is generally done by researchers, whether locally or internationally, based in locations other than the study locations and by people with more power than the marginalised groups they research. It therefore has a tendency towards unjust practices that sideline, distort, or erase the knowledge and interpretations of the marginalised groups while favouring those of the researchers. To develop a framework of expectations for practices that respect the dignity of marginalised people, we sampled and synthesised complaints about knowledge practices in global health published in 12 journals from 2017 to 2023. We identified four sets of expectations-transparency, non-extraction, democratisation, and transformation-across eight stages of research: funding decisions, framing of issues and posing of research questions, ethics approval, data collection, data analysis and interpretation, immediate or direct use of data and knowledge produced, dissemination of findings, and long-term or indirect use of data and knowledge produced. These expectations affirm the dignity of marginalised groups as knowers, sense-makers of knowledge, and seekers of transformational change.
AB - Global health research is generally done by researchers, whether locally or internationally, based in locations other than the study locations and by people with more power than the marginalised groups they research. It therefore has a tendency towards unjust practices that sideline, distort, or erase the knowledge and interpretations of the marginalised groups while favouring those of the researchers. To develop a framework of expectations for practices that respect the dignity of marginalised people, we sampled and synthesised complaints about knowledge practices in global health published in 12 journals from 2017 to 2023. We identified four sets of expectations-transparency, non-extraction, democratisation, and transformation-across eight stages of research: funding decisions, framing of issues and posing of research questions, ethics approval, data collection, data analysis and interpretation, immediate or direct use of data and knowledge produced, dissemination of findings, and long-term or indirect use of data and knowledge produced. These expectations affirm the dignity of marginalised groups as knowers, sense-makers of knowledge, and seekers of transformational change.
KW - Biomedical Research
KW - Global Health
KW - Humans
KW - Personhood
KW - Respect
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013853552
U2 - 10.1016/S2214-109X(25)00242-6
DO - 10.1016/S2214-109X(25)00242-6
M3 - Review article
C2 - 40845888
SN - 2214-109X
VL - 13
SP - e1627-e1635
JO - The Lancet. Global health
JF - The Lancet. Global health
IS - 9
ER -