Podcast: Play in new window
What does it mean to step into a community media environment not as an observer at a distance, but as a participant embedded in its everyday routines? This discussion between Rob Watson and Shumaila Jaffrey reflects on that question through the lens of lived experience, research practice, and civic engagement.
Over the course of her placement, Shumaila encountered community media not as an abstract concept, but as a working ecology of relationships, conversations, and shared activity. The discussion explores how this form of engagement offers a different vantage point for understanding social issues. Rather than relying solely on predefined frameworks, it becomes possible to observe how meaning is negotiated in practice, how people relate to one another, and how communication is shaped by context.
A central theme in the conversation is the value of being “in the field.” This is not simply about proximity, but about participation. It involves listening, contributing, and recognising how knowledge is produced through interaction. Community media, in this sense, operates as a space where research and practice intersect, allowing for a more grounded and reflexive form of inquiry.
The discussion also considers the importance of neutrality, not as detachment, but as a disciplined openness to different perspectives. By working within a community media setting, researchers are able to encounter a range of voices and experiences that might otherwise remain peripheral. This creates opportunities to reassess assumptions, refine questions, and develop a more nuanced understanding of the issues being studied.
At the same time, the conversation highlights the role of relationships. The sense of belonging that emerges from collaborative work, shared routines, and informal exchanges is not incidental. It is central to how community media functions. These relationships shape both the process of communication and the experience of learning, reinforcing the idea that knowledge is not simply acquired, but co-produced.
There is also a recognition that community media offers something distinctive within the broader media landscape. It provides a platform where participation is not limited to consumption, but extends to creation, dialogue, and reflection. For researchers, this presents an opportunity to engage with media as a social practice, rather than as a set of outputs or metrics.
This podcast discussion therefore serves as both a reflection and an invitation. It reflects on the value of experiential learning within community media, and it invites others to consider how similar approaches might inform their own work. What changes when research is grounded in participation? How does understanding shift when it is shaped by interaction rather than abstraction?
These are questions that do not yield simple answers, but they point towards a way of working that is attentive, responsive, and rooted in the realities of everyday communication. In that respect, the discussion offers a useful starting point for thinking about how community media can support both research and practice in a changing social and media environment.