TED Talks Daily - How community-led research drives social change | Monica Malta
Episode Date: January 4, 2025What's the best way to develop and implement solutions to social problems? TED Fellow and human rights activist Monica Malta discusses why traditional, top-down policymaking often fails by excluding k...ey voices and missing root causes. She shows why community-based participatory research — a method that empowers communities to co-create solutions to their own challenges — taps into the resilience and strength of everyday people to be leaders of change. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity
every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hough.
Today's talk is a TED Fellows film adapted for podcasts just for our TED Talks Daily
listeners.
TED's fellowship supports a network of global innovators, and we're so excited to share
their work with you.
Today we'd like you to meet human rights champion,
Monica Malta.
Monica is a mental health researcher working
at the ground level in Brazil,
advocating for people who are often most marginalized.
She shares why it's so crucial for research
in these communities to be participatory
and how this work is helping address serious
social challenges for those who need it most.
helping address serious social challenges for those who need it most.
It was December 1996 in close to 100 degrees Fahrenheit in Rio, Brazil.
December is really hot in there.
I was sitting in the waiting room and couldn't help but notice the loving couples holding hands, discussing nursery plans, baby names.
I sat in the chair alone with my five-year-old daughter, feeling the kicks of my unborn child in my belly.
I was uninsured, unemployed, living with my parents, and eight months pregnant.
I wasn't even 30, but already a survival of a 10-year marriage where violence was the daily norm.
After broken bones and broken dreams, it seemed my life couldn't get worse.
Or so I thought. When my doctor called me, I noticed her serious expression and felt a chill
down my spine. And then she asked me, are you faithful? I thought, wait, what?
What the heck?
And I just kept staring at her with a glazed look on my face,
unaware of what was going on.
She insisted, are you faithful?
Do you have relationships other than with your husband?
And then I told her once again that I had just
divorced from my abuser, was living with my parent and little daughter,
eight months pregnant,
definitely not thinking about a candlelight date.
And then she said, the thing is you have AIDS.
And by reading our exams, I gotta tell you,
you won't survive to raise this child.
Globally, one in three women face physical
or sexual violence at some point in their
lives, a number that has remained unchained over the past decade.
And just like me, women who experience domestic violence are three times more likely to get
HIV, usually from their abuser.
But here's the thing, most of the research done to address this problem is led by academics,
with minimal input or
participation from the woman facing this terrible reality with a traditional top-down approach
to research.
Academics with more power and resources swap into, quote, safe communities with strategies
and questions that often end up perpetuating biases and stigma against the very people they want to assist.
This leaves them feeling ashamed, confused, diminished.
There is also a risk of not getting to the root of the problem.
How can we fix communities' challenges if they can provide any input?
Aren't they the best experts of their own lives and experiences? I came to understand
this first hand, both during my experience with my doctor on that day and through my
own professional journey. First of all, my doctor was wrong. It is 2024 and I'm still
here 28 years later. I was sick for a long time. But eventually I got better
and lived long enough to become
a woman's right activist,
a professor and a scientist.
And in honor to the countless women
who did not survive domestic violence
and HIV AIDS,
I wanted to use my science
to make a difference in the lives of others like me.
But that meant changing
the way science was done in the first place.
Back in grad school, I got this very neat research project.
I was going to help improve the lives and health of sex workers from Brazil.
So I hit the streets to interview them.
The main question I was supposed to ask,
how often do you have sex without a condom?
Pretty soon I realized I was way off base.
The real worry was not condoms.
The real fear was getting into a car with a client and not making it out alive.
This eventually led me to adopt community participatory research strategies. That's
a fancy name for a way to do science that really includes affected communities, working
with and for them, from the planning stage to the
implementation of strategies. Evaluations of community participatory research are
ongoing, but some authors found it has a greater long-term impact compared to
more traditional methods. This is probably due to this comprehensive data
collection that really includes the unique perspectives of community members,
allowing us to better understand complex social and health issues. I saw this
impact firsthand in my work with the queer community from Brazil. We formed an
advisory board representing diverse regions and populations and worked
together to develop the questionnaire, conduct the surveys.
What we found was that queer Brazilian were facing high rates of bullying, violence, school dropout, poverty, and mental health struggles.
So we partnered with local organizations to implement strategies such as Preparanáing, a free college preparation course, and entrepreneurship training.
These strategies developed to break the cycle of social exclusion and poverty.
After seven years, our own tracking shows that more than 80% of Preparanay students
continue their education receiving a college or university degree.
The vast majority of those participating in
entrepreneurship trainings either launched new businesses or improved existing ones.
To address bullying and violence, we developed the Rise app, again in close collaboration with the
community. The app has features like a panic button, safe route mapping, mental health screening, 24-7 crisis support.
It has thousands of users, many of whom have shared with us how the app has literally saved
their lives.
Help is just a push away.
Every single strategy we were able to bring to reality was developed, implemented, tested,
revised in close collaboration with the community.
This is in essence what community participatory research is.
I know as a survivor myself that we want to be at the table,
we want to co-create change in our own communities.
But that's my own reality.
And the singular experience of a domestic violence survivor from Rio is different
from sex workers from Argentina, indigenous women from the Amazon Bay, people living with
HIV AIDS from Uganda, Mozambique, Kenya. To work with those communities, I also had to
humble myself and listen, truly listen to each community needs, realities, priorities.
And I have learned so much.
I've cried and laughed a lot.
I have met amazing, resilient, powerful humans.
And together we developed new services, improved existing ones, and even help to change local and national legislations.
But I was not their savior.
They were their own heroes.
That was Ted Fellow Monica Malta.
To learn more about the Ted Fellows program and watch all of the Ted Fellows films, go
to fellows.ted.com.
And that's it for today.
Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian
Green, Autumn Thompson, and Alejandra Salazar.
It was mixed by Christopher Faisy-Bogan. Additional support
from Emma Topner and Daniela Ballerezo. I'm Elise Hue. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh
idea for your feet. Thanks for listening.
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It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series 10,
available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS are later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary.