Local academic, CEO publishes new framework for social change
8 min
•May 5, 202628 days agoSummary
Brittany Lewis, PhD and CEO of Research in Action, discusses her new book 'Building a New Table,' which presents a community-centered framework for social change. She critiques traditional extractive research models and shares examples of how inclusive, community-engaged research at her organization has driven policy changes in Minnesota, particularly around evictions and emergency assistance.
Insights
- Traditional research approaches are extractive and exclude communities from meaning-making, perpetuating historical patterns of harm and ineffective interventions
- Deep community engagement requires rejecting short-term grant cycles and restrictive success metrics in favor of relationship-building and long-term cultural change
- The real barrier to social change is not technical but cultural—organizational leadership and willingness to act on research findings matter more than the quality of reports
- Performative DEI and diversity initiatives without genuine community partnership are ineffective; authentic engagement requires acknowledging historical harm and rebuilding trust
- Research organizations must align their practices with their values, including turning down projects that don't allow for meaningful community involvement
Trends
Shift from extractive to participatory research models in social impact workGrowing criticism of performative DEI initiatives lacking community accountabilityIncreased demand for research that directly influences policy and practice changeRecognition that grant-driven timelines undermine authentic community engagementFocus on organizational culture change as prerequisite for social changeIntegration of historical harm acknowledgment into research and community partnership frameworksRejection of traditional success metrics in favor of relationship-based and impact-driven outcomesCommunity-led agenda-setting replacing top-down institutional research priorities
Topics
Community-centered research methodologyExtractive vs. participatory research modelsSocial change framework and implementationEviction prevention and housing policyEmergency assistance program reformHennepin County shelter policyDEI performativity vs. authentic engagementOrganizational culture changeGrant funding and research timelinesHistorical harm and trust-building in communitiesPolicy advocacy and legislative changeLeadership ethics and values alignmentCommunity engagement best practicesEquine Action modelNorth Minneapolis community development
Companies
Research in Action
Brittany Lewis's Minnesota-based organization that conducts community-centered research and has led projects on evict...
Pollard Family Foundation
Foundation that funded half a million dollars to redesign Hennepin County Emergency Assistance based on Research in A...
Hennepal County
County government that eliminated self-pay shelter policy and reformed emergency assistance processes based on commun...
People
Brittany Lewis
Guest discussing her new book on community-centered social change framework and her organization's research-to-policy...
Quotes
"I feel like this book was always needed. I feel like I needed it when I was figuring out who and what I wanted to be as a leader and because it didn't exist I had to figure out for myself the best way to lead pulling from so many different toolkits."
Brittany Lewis
"We don't take on projects that are not committed to the type of practice and policy change that we are. So we might not be the organization for you because we understand to do deep, intentional community based work does take time."
Brittany Lewis
"If I'm going to live my values and I'm going to live the ethics of the change that I seek in the world, what I take on has to actually mirror that."
Brittany Lewis
"We can write a great report, but if you have people at a table who aren't willing to move it, it does nothing."
Brittany Lewis
"Half of our model is about how we acknowledge historic harm, how we process, how do we build those harmed relationships in the process and then grow in our self-awareness."
Brittany Lewis
Full Transcript