Introduction to Special Topic Section of The International Journal of Transpersonal Studies: Participatory Research Methods

Participatory research methods—in this context, referring to the related streams of participatory action, action, and collaborative research as elaborated below[1]—have yet to secure an established role in transpersonal studies despite clear alignment with transpersonal research praxis (e.g., Anderson, 2018; Anderson & Braud, 2011; Braud & Anderson, 1998) and promising potential to further the transformative mission of the field (Sohmer, 2020a, 2020b). This gap has grown increasingly evident as the years elapse since the participatory turn in transpersonal theory (e.g., Ferrer, 2002, 2008, 2017; Ferrer & Sherman, 2008; Hartelius & Ferrer, 2013). Whether one views this “turn” as a paradigm shift that marks the second era of transpersonal thought (e.g., Hartelius et al., 2017; Lahood, 2007a, 2010a, 2010b; Tarnas, 2001) or simply acknowledges the well-substantiated rise of participatory perspectives in the field (e.g., Dale, 2014; Ferrer, 2011; 2017; Ferrer & Sherman, 2008; Lahood, 2007b, 2008), the contrastingly limited attention paid to practical enactments of the participatory ethos is striking.

In this spirit, this monograph brings together a collection of participatory research articles of relevance to transpersonal studies. Before outlining these papers, this introduction briefly defines participatory research methods and situates them in relation to transpersonal research in general and in particular since the participatory turn. The prospective contribution of these methods is examined in light of the transpersonal mission. That is, the shared commitment to individual and collective human flourishing in harmony with social, ecological, and spiritual spheres that, arguably, unites the diverse disciplines and initiatives of transpersonal studies (Sohmer, 2020a, 2020b). Finally, a preview of the collected articles, curated to highlight current participatory research within the transpersonal field, is offered. Ultimately, this monograph aims to pave the way for future applications of participatory methods in transpersonal studies not only to support the much-needed invigoration of research in the field (Cunningham, 2007, 2015; Daniels, 2013; Hartelius et al., 2017; Kaklauskas & Randol, 2016), but in service of the transformation—personal, social, ecological, and spiritual—to which transpersonal studies aspires to contribute.

Brief Introduction to Participatory Research

To first outline the territory, participatory research methods refer to a diverse class of participatory, action, and collaborative approaches to qualitative research in the social sciences. While numerous distinct methods fall within this category—Fals-Borda (1996) reported at least 35—some of the most established include participatory action research(e.g., Chevalier & Buckles, 2019; Fals-Borda & Rahman, 1991), action inquiry (Torbert, 1991, 2001), community-based participatory research (Hacker, 2013; Israel et al., 2013), appreciative inquiry (Cooperrider & Srivastva, 1987), participatory research (Skolimowski, 1994), cooperative inquiry (Heron, 1996; Heron & Reason, 2006), and collaborative inquiry (Bray et al., 2000; Kasl & Yorks, 2002). Together, these methods contribute to what Lincoln and Guba (2011) acknowledge as the fifth major paradigm in qualitative research—the participatory paradigm (following Heron & Reason, 1997)—after positivism, postpositivism, critical theory, and constructivism. Although the approaches may have distinct historical antecedents, unique methodological features, and affinity with different disciplines, they share a common ontological stance on the nature of knowledge and reality and employ research practices in accordance with a participatory worldview (e.g., Ferrer, 2002, 2017; Hartelius & Ferrer, 2013; Heron, 2006; Reason, 1994a, 1994b; Skolimowski, 1994; Tarnas, 1991, 2006). Namely, from a participatory perspective, experiential reality is seen as a dynamic cocreation between interdependent players within living systems. A participatory epistemology follows from this worldview, forwarding a perspective of knowledge as enacted (e.g., Ferrer, 2002, 2008, 2017; Hartelius & Ferrer, 2013) between a knowing subject; their domain of inquiry; and the social, ecological, and spiritual contexts that contain them.

The participatory stance contrasts with positivism, which assumes an inert, mechanistic universe—or even living human subjects—that can be objectively known by an external researcher. Moreover, this perspective also differs from the perennial philosophy (Huxley, 1945) prominent in early transpersonal theory (e.g., Cortright, 1997; Grof, 1998; Wilber, 1975, 1980), in which diverse spiritual paths are seen as different approaches to the same spiritual Truth or ultimate (i.e., usually framed as a neo-Vedantic nondualism). Instead, a participatory orientation supports the possibility of ontological pluralism (i.e., the possible coexistence of multiple subtle or spiritual realities with which individuals and systems cocreate), while acknowledging the influential role of a researcher’s intention, attention, and positionality (e.g., social identity location, cultural background, historical context, and psychospiritual development) in shaping acts of knowing, and the dynamics of power inherent in knowledge production. That being said, participatory perspectives differ from relativism and radical constructivism by honoring the ontological validity of external and internal organizing structures with which individual subjectivities participate. Thus, it is not quite accurate to say, as some accounts suggest (e.g., Cunningham, 2007), that a participatory stance is infinitely pluralistic, “grant[ing] the existence of as many spiritual realities as there are individuals who experience them” (p. 42). Yet, there is likely a spectrum among participatory theorists on the respective roles and emphases granted to personal-individual agency (i.e., authority or primacy) versus interpersonal and transpersonal agency in cocreative endeavors (see Heron & Sohmer, this issue). Although beyond the scope of this introduction, this nuance in participatory transpersonal discourse marks an important area for future dialogue and engagement.

These ontological and epistemological underpinnings of participatory methodologies correspond with their practical dimensions in three major ways. First, perhaps most explicitly, participants—often called coresearchers or coinquirers—in participatory research are included to varying degrees in research design, implementation, and meaning-making. In this way, everyone involved in the research endeavor is empowered as an agent of knowledge, challenging the typical distribution of power in conventional research (i.e., in which knowledge making agency is granted primarily to the initiating—often academic, elite—researcher). This practice is based on the ethical and political assertion that persons have a right to participate in processes that seek to generate knowledge about them (e.g., Heron & Reason, 1997) as well as the epistemic argument that the validity of knowledge is enhanced through the full participation of the individuals or communities who are being studied (e.g., Heron, 1996).

Secondly, participatory approaches often employ experiential learning strategies to engage inquiry in real-life contexts and actively generate research data through recursive cycles of action and reflection. Thus, rather than relying purely on past experience and retrospective data, as is typical in interview-based qualitative methods, participatory research processes create opportunities for novel, emergent knowledge to be generated. In contrast with experimental research under controlled conditions, participatory research cycles are often taken within the living contexts of inquiry—in coresearcher’s daily lives, work, and communities. Relatedly, some methods—such as cooperative inquiry (Heron, 1996) and embodied spiritual inquiry (Ferrer, 2017; Ferrer & Sohmer, 2017; Sohmer, 2018)—accept an expanded epistemology, including propositional, presentational, practical, and transformative knowledge (Heron, 1996; Heron & Reason, 1997, 2006, 2008). These methods invite multiple ways of knowing (e.g., contemplative, embodied, intuitive, emotional, and creative) within inquiry-action cycles, thus, leveraging intelligences beyond the rational mind as well as possible state-specific knowledge (i.e., knowledge accessed through psychospiritual practice, intentionally cultivated states of consciousness, or spontaneously arising expanded states of consciousness; Cunningham, 2015; Ferrer, 2014, 2017; Tart, 2009). Finally, in addition to informative or conceptual outcomes, the practical and transformative dimensions of research are emphasized in participatory methods, asserting the axiological directive that both research processes and outcomes should meaningfully transform researchers, their spheres of study, the research audience, and the wider world.

It is important to clarify that most participatory research methodologies do not have a historical correspondence with transpersonal participatory philosophy. Rather, the majority of participatory methods have streams of influence and histories independent of, or not directly connected with, transpersonal participatory theory (e.g., Bray et al., 2000; Fals-Borda & Rahman, 1991; Hacker, 2013). Cooperative inquiry (Heron, 1996) is, arguably, an exception given clear historical and contemporary connections with the transpersonal field, including shared antecedents in humanistic psychology, an existing body of transpersonal cooperative inquiries (e.g., Heron, 1998; 2001), and Heron’s contributions to transpersonal scholarship (for further discussion, see Sohmer, 2020a, 2020b). In addition, Ferrer’s (2017) embodied spiritual inquiry—a contemporary participatory approach to research and learning inspired by cooperative inquiry—was generated within a transpersonal orientation. Thus, prior to this monograph, these two participatory methods have been most explicitly substantiated and applied within transpersonal contexts, perhaps lending them unique strengths of relevance to transpersonal studies. That said, the shared paradigm outlined above unites participatory methods and aligns them with the participatory orientation in the transpersonal field. Thus, I see ample opportunities ahead for diverse participatory methods to become better known and utilized within transpersonal studies.

Promising Horizons: Participatory Methods in Transpersonal Studies

While the viability and extent of the prospective contribution that participatory methodologies may offer transpersonal studies will need to be substantiated through more practical examples—like the ones in this monograph—existing research in related fields has suggested promising horizons. In fact, participatory methods may offer an important key to ameliorating some of the most persistent challenges in the transpersonal field (Sohmer, 2020a, 2020b). Specifically, in a recent synthesis of critiques of transpersonal psychology, I explored three interrelated challenges discerned within the field: cultural bias, limited social engagement, and limited research (Sohmer, 2020a). These limitations threaten the relevance of transpersonal psychology in contemporary scholarship and society and inhibit the actualization of the field’s expressed transformative vision (Boucouvalas, 1980, 1981; Brooks et al., 2013; Caplan et al., 2003; Daniels, 2013; Hartelius et al., 2007; Hocoy, 2016; Hoffman, 2016; Kaklauskas et al., 2016a, 2016b; Rothberg, 1999). Participatory methods offer value in these regards, with the potential to simultaneously address all three critiques and provide an underutilized class of research strategies well suited for the subtle, dynamic, and complex terrain of the transpersonal field. That is, many transpersonal domains of inquiry lend well to the experiential inquiry cycles employed in participatory research. For example, exploring the mechanisms, benefits, and pitfalls of particular psychospiritual practices (e.g., Rubinart et al., 2016) would be well served by rounds of experiential immersion in the practice, immediate reflection, and intersubjective exploration. Similarly, exploring best practices to address collective challenges—like facing the realities of ecological grief and social injustice—or healing of psychospiritual ailments, can be meaningfully engaged through active-reflective inquiry cycles within mutually concerned groups. In addition, the expanded terrain of transpersonal studies calls for epistemic diversity through the inclusion of multiple ways of knowing, state-specific knowledge, potential intelligences developed through psychospiritual practice, and expanded states of consciousness in research. Participatory methods not only leave room for the inclusion of these expanded ways of knowing but may also provide the experiential means to cultivate them during research endeavors (e.g., Ferrer & Sohmer, 2017; Heron & Reason, 2008; Reason, 1994). Finally, participatory methods may provide avenues beyond the persistent Western, patriarchal cultural bias for which the transpersonal field has been critiqued (Brooks, 2010; Brooks et al., 2013; Ferrer, 2002, 2017; Heron, 1996, 1998; Hocoy, 2016; Hoffman, 2016; Lahood, 2016), through processes amenable to the inclusion of multiple, diverse perspectives or deliberately through research initiatives to address the roots of cultural bias, social identity dynamics, and issues of power, privilege, and oppression (for exemplar inquiries in this realm, see, Barlas et al., 2000; European-American Collaborative Challenging Whiteness, 2002, 2009; Kasl & Yorks, 2002; Rossenwasser, 2000; Paxton, 2003).

In light of these potential benefits, I argue that that the applied value of participatory research methods in transpersonal studies transcends philosophical orientation. It is striking, however, that growing interest in participatory perspectives in transpersonal studies has not reflected an adoption of participatory methods of learning, research, and activism as well. With shared ontological, epistemological, and axiological values, these approaches contribute to the essential, and so far, underdeveloped, branch of methodology to transpersonal participatory movements (Table 1). That is, participatory methods can provide the means to engage in inquiry, generate knowledge, and foster transformation from within the same ethos of transpersonal participatory theory. In the reverse, without attention to methodology, transpersonal participatory theory is, arguably, limited in its potential scope of practical value. Additionally, participatory and action research in any field can serve as a relational spiritual practice that may offer a unique opportunities for contemporary spiritual practitioners (Heron and Lahood, 2008) by providing avenues for experiential psychospiritual exploration beyond established religions, traditions, or schools (Heron, 2006). Thus, integrating and developing participatory methods in transpersonal studies may open creative

pathways to enact the participatory turn in both process (i.e., experiential immersion in participatory learning and spirituality) and outcomes (i.e., inviting novel, participatory knowledge to be cocreated; Sohmer, 2020b).

Features of the Participatory Paradigm 
Ontology Epistemology Axiology Methodology
Subjective-objective ontology or intersubjective ontology—reality is cocreated between the observing subject and the personal, interpersonal, and transpersonal dimensions in which they are embedded Critical subjectivity in cocreative participation (intersubjectivity); extended epistemology including multiple ways of knowing; collaborative meaning making Purpose of research and learning is to ultimately facilitate healing, growth, and/or transformation; with attention to social, ecological, and/or spiritual dimensions Collaborative and active learning cycles, often embedded in real-life contexts; practical and transformative outcomes are primary; grounded in shared experience

(informed by Lincoln & Guba, 2011; see the original for a table comparing positivism, post positivism, critical theory, constructivism, and participatory paradigms, p. 168)

Moreover, the shared emphasis on the transformative dimensions of research—what Anderson (2018) has called transformative research praxis—provides a salient bridge between participatory and transpersonal research methods suggestive of a promising synergy in service of the transformative vision of transpersonal studies (Anderson & Braud, 2011; Braud & Anderson, 1998). Although historically, transpersonal research has exhibited a greater emphasis on personal transformation and participatory methods have focused more explicitly on social and political transformation (e.g., Fals-Borda & Rahman, 1991; McIntyre, 2007; McTaggart, 1997), this divergence in focus is not intrinsic to the methodologies per se, but rather illuminates implicit preferences and biases in the transpersonal field that warrant further investigation. Nevertheless, the shared fundamental concern with transformative validity (Anderson & Broad, 2011)—the practical effects of research in addition to conceptual or informative validity (i.e., conceptual knowledge)—demonstrates the resonance of participatory research methods in transpersonal contexts. Moreover, while the transformative mission of transpersonal studies may be aspirational, serving perhaps more as an organizing principle or implicit ideal than a practical central focus, maintaining integrity with it requires ongoing reflection on the ways our professional efforts and scholarship genuinely contribute to this end. The research in this monograph provides an applied basis to suggest that participatory methods may not only be well suited for transpersonal domains of inquiry but may also help bridge the gaps between the transpersonal vision and its actualization.

In this spirit, this special issue offers the first focused collection of participatory research studies of relevance to transpersonal studies. Admittedly, it took considerable effort to gather contemporary research at this intersection, corroborating the need to build awareness, legitimize, and invigorate the use of participatory methods in the transpersonal field. This monograph, thus, marks a beginning rather than a culmination—illuminating future directions as much as celebrating existing works. These future directions extend both into practical applications of participatory methods within diverse inquiry groups and contexts, as well as toward further establishing methodological validity in light of transpersonal research standards (Anderson & Braud, 2011; Braud, 1998; Heron, 1996; Lincoln & Guba, 2011). In large part, this conversation is embedded in a deeper debate regarding what constitutes transpersonal science (e.g., Cunningham, 2015, 2019a, 2019b; Daniels, 2021; Ferrer, 2014, 2017; Friedman, 2002, 2013) that reaches beyond the scope of this introduction. In this context, it should suffice to say that the effort to legitimize the validity of participatory methods requires further theoretical elaboration and practical application. Much remains unknown regarding optimal applications of various participatory methods in service of diverse transpersonal contexts and initiatives. For example, future research is necessary to clarify whether certain participatory methods are more amenable to transpersonal studies in general or within specific inquiry domains. In addition, future research should intentionally apply proposed validity practices—such as Heron and Reason’s (2006; Heron, 1996) CI validity procedures, Ferrer’s (2002, 2017) participatory validity tests, Anderson and Broad’s (2011) member checks or participant validation—and consider developing new ones. All of this opens up fertile territory for the next wave of participatory and transpersonal researchers to engage.

It is important to name in particular that of the studies represented in this issue, only one focuses explicitly on social or ecological activism. This representation is discordant with the values of participatory research at large, imploring greater attention to collective transformation initiatives in future transpersonal participatory efforts. Moreover, the opportunities to address the contemporary social, ecological, and spiritual crises through participatory initiatives within the transpersonal research space are robust; and the possibilities for future inquiries across transpersonal domains are plentiful. In turn, as these opportunities are embraced, continued efforts to assess and promote research quality will substantiate further the methodological validity of participatory research in transpersonal contexts. Thus, while acknowledging a humble beginning, the contents of this monograph open promising vistas, suggesting that greater inclusion of participatory methods will foster the transformation to which transpersonal studies are committed.

The Present Issue: Overview of Articles

This special issue includes four original participatory research studies and an interview with the founder of a prominent participatory research approach. The methods represented include community-based participatory research (Hacker, 2013; Israel et al., 2013), participatory action research (Fals-Borda & Rahman, 1991; Chevalier & Buckles, 2019), cooperative/collaborative inquiry (Heron, 1996; Bray et al., 2000), and relational inquiry (Lahood, 2013, this issue). The topics span a variety of transpersonal interests including the role of entheogenic and nature-oriented transpersonal experiences in empowering ecological activism, approaches to enhance spiritual wellness on a college campus, the process and learning outcomes of a long-term relational inquiry, and the integration of transformative travel experience. Finally, the special issue closes with an interview with John Heron, the founder of cooperative inquiry (CI)—a participatory methodology that is particularly well suited for transpersonal studies (Sohmer, 2020a, 2020b; Ross, this issue)—discussing the interface of CI and transpersonal studies.

Beginning this issue is Heather Walker’s participatory action research and heuristic inquiry investigating inspirations and challenges to ecological activism with a group of 21 North Americans in the context of the contemporary ecological crises. Along with the explicit goal of empowering participants’ ecological activism, the study explored the role of entheogenic and nature-oriented transpersonal experiences in ecological engagement efforts and discusses the mutually stimulating connection between psychological growth and ecological activism. Yet, as Walker emphasized: “changing one’s intra-subjective experience is not enough to address the ecological crisis—and cultivation of a comprehensive, nurturing, and sustaining philosophy of life is not mutually exclusive to a critical need for collective sociopolitical responsiveness” (p. ?). The study also examined coresearchers’ attitudes toward sociopolitical activism, uncovering the negative associations held by a number of them; thus, suggesting the need for supports to evoke collaborative sociopolitical transformation. This trailblazing work paves the way for future efforts of transpersonal social engagement (Rothberg & Coder, 2013) bridging the gap between the transpersonal concern with social, ecological, and spiritual flourishing and applied contributions in this realm.

The second article presents a community based participatory research (CBPR) initiative to promote spiritual wellness on a college campus. In this study, Regina Idoate and her colleagues employed the Community Readiness Model to develop an initiative to promote spiritual wellness in a Midwestern state university. Through the research process, thecommunity’s level of readiness to promote spiritual wellness increased from stage three, vague awareness, at baseline tostage six, initiation, at follow up—demonstrating the effectiveness of a community-based approach to develop appropriate strategies to promote spiritual practices in higher education environments. While findings of this study are contextual and participatory—thus, embedded in their specific context—this initiative offers a promising prototype to enhance the increasingly recognized vector of spiritual development in higher education (e.g., Dalton et al., 2006; Duerr et al., 2003; Palmer & Zajonc, 2010).

            In the third article, entitled “Relational Inquiry: Seven Years Practicing Seven Relationships,” Gregg Lahood offers an account from a long-term relational inquiry group in Byron Bay, Australia. Through a descriptive account, Lahood presents relational inquiry as an informal approach to new paradigm research and relationship-based spirituality that is informed by, yet distinct from, cooperative inquiry and Gestalt-practice. Drawing on coinquirer testimonies, the article outlines the inquiry practices and the five “basic fields” of inquiry engaged in this group. In addition, Lahood presents a seven relationships model as an outcome of the inquiry process and a heuristic for understating and participating in relational inquiry. This article is of particular value for prospective initiators of relational inquiry and practitioners of relational spirituality.

In the final participatory research study, Susan Ross shares the process and outcomes of cooperative inquiry/collaborative inquiry (CI) (Bray et al., 2002; Kasl & Yorks, 2002; Heron, 1996) exploring the phenomenon of integrating transformation. Drawing on her research with a group of 10 women after the experience of life-changing travel (see also Ross, 2008, 2017), the article focuses on CI design, data collection and analysis, and validity. With the expressed purpose to “embolden use of CI by demystifying its concepts, design, practices, and ethic” (p. ?). Ross closes the article with critical reflection of the merits and challenges of CI grounded in the literature and her personal experience.

            In the closing paper in this special issue, I interview John Heron—the founder of cooperative inquiry (Heron, 1996, 1998), an experiential, participatory approach to research and learning that is being increasingly recognized as a promising approach to transpersonal research (Ross, this issue; Sohmer, 2020a, 2020b). After presenting a summary of cooperative inquiry, Heron and I discuss CI in the context of transpersonal studies, including past and possible future applications. Questioning the emphasis on “trans” in transpersonal, Heron unfolds the three dimensions of human spirituality that CI engages and offers a vision for transpersonal studies in light of participatory ideals. We also explore questions around cultivating authentic relationships in CI, the role of the nonhuman natural world in CI, and practices based on CI principles that can be used in daily life. Finally, we discuss the application of an extended epistemology and radical assessment in education, self-generating culture, and the role of CI in human evolution.

            As a whole, this collection serves as an offering to inspire the next generation of transpersonal practitioners, educators, and researchers to broaden their methodological palate to include participatory methods. The robust learning outcomes in these articles, as well as the meta-inquiries regarding the value of participatory methods in the transpersonal studies, lay a solid foundation on which future initiatives can build. Recalling Anderson and Broad’s (2011) well-reputed definition of transpersonal psychology as, “the study and cultivation of the highest and most transformative human values and potentials—individual, communal, and global—that reflect the mystery and interconnectedness of life, including our human journey within the cosmos” (p. 9) offers a helpful orientation and guide. May we return deeply and often to reflect on this mission and draw on all of the tools at our reach in its service. It is my hope that this monograph bolsters the commitment in this direction, serving as an inspiration and practical road map to creatively align our efforts with the transformative vision of transpersonal field.

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[1] Note, “participatory action research” (e.g., McIntyre, 2007; McTaggart, 1997), “action research” (e.g., Reason & Bradbury, 2008) and “collaborative inquiry” (e.g., Bray et al., 2000) have also been used instead as overarching categories that house participatory research methods in other contexts. Also, the specific participatory research method of Skolimowski (1994), is one method within this category.