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Michael Chew
  • Brunswick, Melbourne, Australia

Michael Chew

This practice-based enquiry explores how photovoice can be adapted to visualise and influence environmental behaviour in a multi-sited context. While photography can be effective in influencing environmental behaviour change, mainstream... more
This practice-based enquiry explores how photovoice can be adapted to visualise and influence environmental behaviour in a multi-sited context.  While photography can be effective in influencing environmental behaviour change, mainstream images tend to lack engaging narratives due to being predominantly generic and technology focused. 
Participatory photography methods such as photovoice offer alternatives through engaging communities directly to generate site-responsive photographs and stories.  However, this exclusively local focus can neglect broader opportunities for empathy and cross-cultural engagement.  I respond by integrating multi-sited dimensions into photovoice processes, through a design-based participatory action research approach that explores three interrelated research orientations – adapt, visualise, and influence – corresponding to the creation, analysis and audience engagement with photo-stories respectively. 
I first develop novel multi-sited photovoice design and implementation methods across different scales through adapting participatory workshop processes with youth in urban sites across Bangladesh, China and Australia.  I then analyse the visualisations of environmental behaviour depicted in the resulting photo-stories, affirming these methods’ efficacy and inviting expanded considerations of agency and subjectivity in environmental behaviour.  Finally, I explore the influence of the photo-stories themselves on environmental behaviour through designing unique participatory audience engagement processes within exhibition, interview and collaborative formats.  I employ a mixed-methods approach encompassing qualitative content analysis and actor network theory across these three research orientations to affirm the importance of materiality, relationality and empathy to participation and visualisation of environmental behaviour.
This enquiry establishes an original open photovoice method encompassing these combined novel creation and audience engagement practices.  This affirms the importance of bringing global perspectives to local photovoice practices, contributing to research in visual research methods.  These learnings have the potential to significantly improve the effectiveness of multi-sited participatory action research and environmental behaviour change programs.
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Water access issues pose continual problems for villages in arid areas of Rajasthan, India, and the common response has been technological solutions through water management projects. Qualitative participatory research can provide... more
Water access issues pose continual problems for villages in arid areas of Rajasthan, India, and the common response has been technological solutions through water management projects.  Qualitative participatory research can provide alternative approaches to these issues, and this paper reflects on one such project run as part of a larger scale development evaluation program.  The project used a participatory photography process to allow villagers to take and select photographs that represented what water meant to them in the present and future, along with how they saw their own responsibilities these areas.  The complex visual and textual data was analysed using two different analytical processes – a positivist ‘measurement’ approach in line with the water management paradigm, and an alternative actor network ‘relational’ approach.
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There is a well-established literature on the macro-scale health and environmental impacts of urbanisation in Asia. However, a key but often-neglected effect of this urbanisation is the growing psychological disconnection of the... more
There is a well-established literature on the macro-scale health and environmental impacts of urbanisation in Asia. However, a key but often-neglected effect of this urbanisation is the growing psychological disconnection of the population from surrounding natural environments. The first part of this paper sets out the context of disconnection on the interconnected perceptual and imaginative levels. The second part introduces eco-phenomenology as a theoretical and methodological process to explore the potential for deeper human-nature engagement. The third part of the paper presents and discusses results from the author’s first-person phenomenological inquiry into human-nature interactions in the context of Dhaka. The fourth part then briefly sketches out opportunities for redeveloping an ecologically grounded perception and imagination that can contribute to a sustainable Asian urbanism.
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This paper presents a phenomenological investigation of my myopia to explore key questions in eco-psychology. I examine how the lived experience of seeing through this ‘impaired’ visual condition can actually provide insights into our... more
This paper presents a phenomenological investigation of my myopia to explore key questions in eco-psychology. I examine how the lived experience of seeing through this ‘impaired’ visual condition can actually provide insights into our relationships with human society and the natural world. Through expanding our aesthetic appreciation of the world around us, while deepening our awareness of our own embodiment, myopic vision gestures towards new forms of intersubjectivity that soften the boundaries of self, culture, and nature – carrying with them the potential for meaningful cultural change.
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This paper explores how principles of critical pedagogy and transformational learning operated in a series of photography workshops ran with multicultural youth.
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This paper explores the relationship between self-perceptions of agency and transformational experiences amongst young self-identified social change agents. The extent that these experiences manifest on a social compared to individual... more
This paper explores the relationship between self-perceptions of agency and transformational experiences amongst young self-identified social change agents. The extent that these experiences manifest on a social compared to individual level is explored through transformational learning theory.
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This paper explores self-perceptions of agency amongst returned volunteers through two processes – reflection-action workshops, and individual interviews. These processes reveal the different ways in which the relationship to self and... more
This paper explores self-perceptions of agency amongst returned volunteers through two processes – reflection-action workshops, and individual interviews. These processes reveal the different ways in which the relationship to self and world are transformed through returning home, and suggest the importance of continued critical engagement.
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This paper explores various concepts of transformative leadership in the theory and operation of a pilot social change project, the Pledge Project. In particular it critically explores how the transformative concepts of expanded... more
This paper explores various concepts of transformative leadership in the theory and operation of a pilot social change project, the Pledge Project. In particular it critically explores how the transformative concepts of expanded identification and distributive leadership operate in the project.
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This paper documents a pilot community project that used strategic questioning to provide a critical reflective space for exploring questions of personal agency and social change. Section 1 presents the project’s theoretical context,... more
This paper documents a pilot community project that used strategic questioning to provide a critical reflective space for exploring questions of personal agency and social change. Section 1 presents the project’s theoretical context, outlining the importance of transformational learning for environmental education, together with reflection, future visioning, and commitment making. Section 2 outlines the project’s methodology through an action-learning process within a community of practice. Section 3 discusses the project’s key findings, and Section 4 present’s future directions for the project.
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This paper presents an analysis of the participatory mapping project OurMelbourne2050. It explores how differing conceptions of imagination operate in the project’s conceptual basis and its actual operation. These aspects of imagination –... more
This paper presents an analysis of the participatory mapping project OurMelbourne2050. It explores how differing conceptions of imagination operate in the project’s conceptual basis and its actual operation. These aspects of imagination – the ecological imagination, utopian futures, the cartographic imagination, and collective visioning - present different lenses through which to examine the project’s effectiveness and to understand the multiple imaginative processes embedded in the project’s operation.
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The distributed aspect of transformative leadership see functions as not restricted to individual leaders themselves, but instead emerging through their relationships with others and their operating environments. This concept implies a... more
The distributed aspect of transformative leadership see functions as not restricted to individual leaders themselves, but instead emerging through their relationships with others and their operating environments. This concept implies a creative tension arising from the relationship between the part and the whole, or the individual and group. This paper consider this relationship and how it is expressed through three selected articles.
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