Two-eyed seeing is a guiding framework for research that values and uses Indigenous and Western ways of knowing. In this article, we describe the merits and challenges of using two-eyed seeing to guide a collaborative research project with a First Nation community in Manitoba, Canada devastated by a human-made flood. In 2011, provincial government officials flooded 17 First Nation communities including Little Saskatchewan First Nation (LSFN), displacing thousands of people. To date, approximately 350 LSFN’s on-reserve members remain displaced. Two-eyed seeing ensured that the study was community-driven and facilitated a more thorough analysis of the data. This case study illuminated the absence of two-eyed seeing in policy making and decisi...
Almost every year, Aboriginal communities are evacuated from northern regions of Canada to nearby ci...
This original research article provides a case study that describes how Métis indigenous knowledge w...
This article reviews an Anishinaabe research paradigm that structures a storytelling project with Al...
Two-eyed seeing is a guiding framework for research that values and uses Indigenous and Western ways...
This article explores the application of two-eyed seeing in the first year of a three-year study abo...
This article explores the application of two-eyed seeing in the first year of a three-year study abo...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
In this time of reconciliation, Indigenous researchers-in-relation are sharing research paradigms an...
Lake St. Martin First Nation, a community situated in the Interlake Region of Manitoba, was permanen...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
As we turn the corner into the new millennium we see the indigenous peoples of Canada move toward re...
This article presents the findings of a two-year exploratory study that examined the challenges iden...
There are a variety of barriers to eye-care service access in rural Northern First Nations communiti...
This research contributes to the anthropology of disaster, offering an ethnographic account of the i...
Moving towards reconciliation within Indigenous research requires the careful examination of existin...
Almost every year, Aboriginal communities are evacuated from northern regions of Canada to nearby ci...
This original research article provides a case study that describes how Métis indigenous knowledge w...
This article reviews an Anishinaabe research paradigm that structures a storytelling project with Al...
Two-eyed seeing is a guiding framework for research that values and uses Indigenous and Western ways...
This article explores the application of two-eyed seeing in the first year of a three-year study abo...
This article explores the application of two-eyed seeing in the first year of a three-year study abo...
Etuaptmumk or Two-Eyed Seeing (E/TES) is foundational in ensuring that Indigenous ways of knowing ar...
In this time of reconciliation, Indigenous researchers-in-relation are sharing research paradigms an...
Lake St. Martin First Nation, a community situated in the Interlake Region of Manitoba, was permanen...
First Nations communities in Canada are disproportionately affected by poor water quality. As one ex...
As we turn the corner into the new millennium we see the indigenous peoples of Canada move toward re...
This article presents the findings of a two-year exploratory study that examined the challenges iden...
There are a variety of barriers to eye-care service access in rural Northern First Nations communiti...
This research contributes to the anthropology of disaster, offering an ethnographic account of the i...
Moving towards reconciliation within Indigenous research requires the careful examination of existin...
Almost every year, Aboriginal communities are evacuated from northern regions of Canada to nearby ci...
This original research article provides a case study that describes how Métis indigenous knowledge w...
This article reviews an Anishinaabe research paradigm that structures a storytelling project with Al...