Employing a reflexive and co-constructed narrative analysis, this article explores our experiences as a non-Indigenous doctoral student and a First Nations research assistant working together within the context of a community-based participatory Indigenous geography research project. Our findings revealed that within the research process there were experiences of conflict, and opportunities to reflect upon our identity and create meaningful relationships. While these experiences contributed to an improved research process, at a broader level, we suggest that they also represented our personal stories of reconciliation. In this article, we share these stories, specifically as they relate to reconciliatory processes of re-education and cultur...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their commu...
Research indicates that claiming a contemporary identity as Pākehā is being redefined by those indiv...
This article is written from the vantage point of an Indigenous scholar located in a major research ...
Employing a reflexive and co-constructed narrative analysis, this article explores our experiences a...
Moving towards reconciliation within Indigenous research requires the careful examination of existin...
Reconciliation in the Canadian context is difficult to define (Graeme & Mandawe, 2017; Martin, 2009)...
Decolonising research in geography is part of a broader 'reflexive' process which continues to quest...
Decolonizing methodologies are gaining increasing prominence in diverse research contexts in which I...
When the Honorable Justice Murray Sinclair, Chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) w...
This dissertation tells the story of partnership between myself, a doctoral student at UBC Okanagan,...
One of the limitations of conventional Canadian conceptions of reconciliation is the underlying assu...
In 2016, the Government of Alberta (Canada) commenced a curriculum development project with an expli...
In Canada, progress towards reconciliation with Aboriginal Peoples has been slow, in part because of...
Aboriginal reconciliation is an important goal. But litigation and negotiation are slow, difficult p...
Insensitive research approaches have resulted in damaged relationships between non-Indigenous resear...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their commu...
Research indicates that claiming a contemporary identity as Pākehā is being redefined by those indiv...
This article is written from the vantage point of an Indigenous scholar located in a major research ...
Employing a reflexive and co-constructed narrative analysis, this article explores our experiences a...
Moving towards reconciliation within Indigenous research requires the careful examination of existin...
Reconciliation in the Canadian context is difficult to define (Graeme & Mandawe, 2017; Martin, 2009)...
Decolonising research in geography is part of a broader 'reflexive' process which continues to quest...
Decolonizing methodologies are gaining increasing prominence in diverse research contexts in which I...
When the Honorable Justice Murray Sinclair, Chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) w...
This dissertation tells the story of partnership between myself, a doctoral student at UBC Okanagan,...
One of the limitations of conventional Canadian conceptions of reconciliation is the underlying assu...
In 2016, the Government of Alberta (Canada) commenced a curriculum development project with an expli...
In Canada, progress towards reconciliation with Aboriginal Peoples has been slow, in part because of...
Aboriginal reconciliation is an important goal. But litigation and negotiation are slow, difficult p...
Insensitive research approaches have resulted in damaged relationships between non-Indigenous resear...
Indigenous health research should reflect the needs and benefits of the participants and their commu...
Research indicates that claiming a contemporary identity as Pākehā is being redefined by those indiv...
This article is written from the vantage point of an Indigenous scholar located in a major research ...