For Indigenous youth in Canada, times are challenging, but the challenges youth face do not define the wholeness of their lived realities. This article focuses on applied theatre engagement, drawing on three youth participatory action research projects with Indigenous youth in three diverse contexts: in a school setting, in a youth offender jail, and with a community-based organization serving street-involved youth. It explores the significance of applied theatre approaches to research with Indigenous youth to avoid reproducing one-dimensional damage-centred narratives in favour of inspiring processes for survivance and resurgence. The discussion emphasizes the ways in which research can offer support for youth to become empowered and for o...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Educational Action Res...
Abstract Working in a homeless youth shelter in a major Eastern Canadian city, over a one year perio...
Indigenous youth represent one of the most marginalized demographics in Canada. As such they must co...
This article presents the process used in a Participatory Research Project with Canadian Indigenous ...
This article introduces a multi-year, multi-site ethnographic study undertaken with 250 young people...
ABSTRACT Indigenous youth in Canada are incarcerated at rates that are six times greater than their ...
This article discusses social innovation in education informed by arts-based and Indigenous ways of ...
This article reports on a research project that used theatre with Indigenous youth to address health...
© 2012 Dr. Rosemary Joan BlightSee also: Dansick, R. (1994). From theatre to communication: the appl...
This study examines how racialized, socioeconomically under-resourced secondary school-age youth in ...
Indigenous communities from around the world, and particularly marginalized youth from within these ...
In this article the researchers explore the use of filmmaking for collaborative community action for...
There is a dearth of research on student-to-student abuse in Canada’s Indian Residential School Syst...
Poor rates of school completion combined with high rate of imprisonment means that at least half the...
This article focuses on a participatory research project designed to promote student use of digital ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Educational Action Res...
Abstract Working in a homeless youth shelter in a major Eastern Canadian city, over a one year perio...
Indigenous youth represent one of the most marginalized demographics in Canada. As such they must co...
This article presents the process used in a Participatory Research Project with Canadian Indigenous ...
This article introduces a multi-year, multi-site ethnographic study undertaken with 250 young people...
ABSTRACT Indigenous youth in Canada are incarcerated at rates that are six times greater than their ...
This article discusses social innovation in education informed by arts-based and Indigenous ways of ...
This article reports on a research project that used theatre with Indigenous youth to address health...
© 2012 Dr. Rosemary Joan BlightSee also: Dansick, R. (1994). From theatre to communication: the appl...
This study examines how racialized, socioeconomically under-resourced secondary school-age youth in ...
Indigenous communities from around the world, and particularly marginalized youth from within these ...
In this article the researchers explore the use of filmmaking for collaborative community action for...
There is a dearth of research on student-to-student abuse in Canada’s Indian Residential School Syst...
Poor rates of school completion combined with high rate of imprisonment means that at least half the...
This article focuses on a participatory research project designed to promote student use of digital ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Educational Action Res...
Abstract Working in a homeless youth shelter in a major Eastern Canadian city, over a one year perio...
Indigenous youth represent one of the most marginalized demographics in Canada. As such they must co...