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Week 8 Reading Assignment, Logan Burd 301368224 - Coggle Diagram
Week 8 Reading Assignment
Using arts-based participatory methods (ABPM) with youth and adolescents can be a way to elicit engagement and expression.
ABPM provides opportunities for youth to share their lived experiences through various methods other than just engaging in interviews or conversations.
Previous research involving ABPM with youth has shown the transformative potential to mobilize social change.
ABPM promotes youth's strengths of attention to detail, visual communication and knowledge of their environments and culture.
Art can portray and facilitate social movements around the world.
Modern-day technology has created opportunities for all communities to develop and post artwork with deeper meanings related to their health and equity issues through social media platforms and public spaces.
Specific populations' health and social equity need to be based on their historical and present-day contexts and experiences.
This can be done through community gathering together and amplifying their voices through traditional art forms and newer technological approaches.
The role of public health practitioners and health promoters related to implementing arts-based methods into practice and community organization.
The importance of understanding a community and the specific needs of each community.
Art-based health promotion can increase awareness and effectively disseminate public health education for all audiences.
Providing space and the opportunity to promote healing from collective and intergenerational trauma.
Art-based health promotion methods can promote well-being and community engagement.
The decolonization of health promotion strategies is crucial.
Participatory and community approaches need to focus on relational power instead of empowerment and self-efficacy.
Useful for fostering community resilience.
Many art-based health promotion campaigns begin as volunteer efforts and grass-root-led campaigns.
Various murals, posters, banners, graffiti, and body maps have been used as political messages to demonstrate lived experiences under the apartheid legislation and experiences of living with HIV.
Theatres, songs and visual methods have a long and rich historical context with research and activism in South Africa.
The "Create Hope campaign" to inspire dialogue on why hope is vital during the COVID-19 pandemic times.
Logan Burd 301368224