BANDA, Davies, BLACKSHAW, Tony, BROWN, Adam, CHOAK, Clare, CRABBE, Tim, GIDLEY, Ben, MELLOR, Gavin, MUIR, Bob, O'CONNOR, Kath, SLATER, Imogen and WOODHOUSE, Donna (2005). Getting to know you: Engagement and relationship building: First interim national positive futures case study research report. Project Report. London, Home Office. [Monograph]
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getting-to-know-you.pdf - Published Version
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getting-to-know-you.pdf - Published Version
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Abstract
This report represents the culmination of the first phase of the Positive Futures (PF) Case Studies Research Project rather than a definitive set of findings as such. Rather like the PF programme itself it is very much a work in progress which is evolving all the time in the context of the action research approach we have adopted. This approach involves a cycle of action and reflection, with both the projects and research adapting in relation to the themes that emerge from the study as it progresses. Nevertheless whilst this element of the research has been concerned as much with the establishment of relations with projects and participants as investigating the relationships between them, we have begun to identify a number of tentative themes and findings. These themes are presented in a fashion which is intended to guide the future direction of projects every bit as much as to gain abstract theoretical insight. Yet this recognition of the importance of practicality and direction should not distract from the importance of gaining a wider contextual feel for the programme. For whilst this summary is intended to highlight the key themes emerging from the research and the policy and practice issues associated with them, it is in the detail of the main report that a full appreciation of the PF approach emerges. It is from the more narrative accounts in these subsequent parts that we have drawn the conclusions and recommendations presented here and which will provide the baselines against which we assess future progress. Indeed these accounts are themselves drawn from three regional reports focused on the seven case studies that constitute the overall national research project.
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