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Elizabeth Benninger; Shereen Naser; SinĂ©ad M. O'Neill – School Psychology International, 2024
Dominant knowledge systems rely on a Western perspective of creating and disseminating new information. These systems marginalize traditional ways of knowing including co-creating knowledge, personal narratives and lived experiences, as well as inherited cultural knowledge. Additionally, Western knowledge systems have centered the White adult male…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged, Minority Groups, Social Justice, School Psychology
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Maya L. Kawailanaokeawaiki Saffery; R. Keawe Lopes; Kawehionalani Goto; Julie Kaomea – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: In "Decolonizing Methodologies" (1999), Linda Tuhiwai Smith asserted that "the master's tools of colonization will not work to decolonize what the master built." Smith challenged Indigenous researchers to fashion "new tools for the purpose of decolonizing and Indigenous tools that can revitalize Indigenous…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Personnel, Indigenous Populations, Decolonization
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Manulani Aluli Meyer; Eseta Tualaulelei – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: This article demonstrates the reach of Tuhiwai Smith's ideas across Pacific research. It discusses the theoretical and practical influence of her seminal work "Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples" through "holographic epistemology", an indigenous way of viewing knowledge.…
Descriptors: Hawaiians, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Researchers
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Kathleen Rodgers; Willow Scobie – Teaching Sociology, 2024
Teaching introductory sociology is one of the primary means by which sociologists mobilize knowledge. Ongoing critical reflection on the content of sociology textbooks is therefore an important disciplinary enterprise. The current critical moment in which many nations, institutions, and publics face a reckoning with their historic and current…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Sociology, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Emma George – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Decolonising methodology requires that researchers engage in a process of learning and unlearning. This research on the inconsistent recognition of Indigenous rights and social determinants of Indigenous health in Australian policy implementation was positioned at the interface of knowledge systems and drew on a weaving metaphor to guide…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Researchers, Politics of Education, Indigenous Populations
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Amy Thomson – Australian Educational Researcher, 2024
From its conception in Australia, subject 'English' has been considered central to the curriculum. The English literature strand in the curriculum does not stipulate specific texts but is more explicit regarding what should be considered as an appropriate 'literary text'. Curriculum documents emphasise the need for texts to have cultural and…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Land Settlement, Indigenous Populations, Language of Instruction
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Lorinda M. N. M. Riley; Jessica P. Kaneakua – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2024
Indigenous people are often hesitant to participate in research projects because they lack trust in researcher intentions. In this article, we explore the critical role that Indigenous boundary spanners play in research conducted with Indigenous communities through our research on oceans and human health. Our analysis centers around five…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Trust (Psychology), Interpersonal Relationship, Experimenter Characteristics
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Dion Enari; Jacoba Matapo; Yvonne Ualesi; Radilaite Cammock; Hilda Port; Juliet Boon; Albert Refiti; Inez Fainga'a-Manu Sione; Patrick Thomsen; Ruth Faleolo – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
Growing interest in Pacific issues has meant a surge in Pacific research across the globe. Sadly, some research on Pacific people has been done without Pacific knowledge, wisdom and culture. As Pacific researchers, we understand the importance of outputs that interweave our ancestral and cultural wisdom, whilst centring and privileging our…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Research, Indigenous Knowledge, Research Methodology
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Lucinda McKnight; Tyson Yunkaporta – Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, 2024
This article provides an account of a yarn between a First Nations Australian researcher and an Anglo-Celtic Australian researcher about the future of writing curriculum in subject English education, if school in its current settler-colonial form were to be abolished and completely re-imagined. Yarning is an Indigenous research method evolving…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Researchers, Writing Instruction, Dialogs (Language)
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Jenny L. Small – About Campus, 2024
White Christian supremacy, by definition an intersectional system of oppression, has influenced all aspects of American society since the time before the country's founding, as it was used to justify the stealing of native lands through colonization and the enslavement of African peoples. White Christian supremacist influences persist today, even…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Advantaged, Christianity, Racism
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Heather E. McGregor; Sara Karn; Micah Flavin – Canadian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
This article summarizes the results of interviews concerning intersections found among social studies and history education, climate education, and Indigenous studies. We explore what may be involved in curricular and pedagogical reform that better features these intersections, and what considerations arise in approaching reform in schools,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Studies, Climate, Indigenous Knowledge
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Marie A. Vander Kloet; Anne E. Wagner – Higher Education Research and Development, 2024
Universities, both in Canada and throughout the global North, are predicated on empiricist and positivist understandings of knowledge and knowledge production which are communicated and strengthened through research practices and protocols. Drawn from a larger study exploring research leadership among accomplished academic staff, this paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Females, College Faculty
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Michelle Locke; Michelle Trudgett; Susan Page – Australian Journal of Education, 2024
The "Developing Indigenous Early Career Researchers Project" is a three-year longitudinal study funded by the Australian Research Council that ran from January 2020 to December 2022. Its main focus was to investigate the experiences and perspectives of Indigenous Early Career Researchers working in universities across Australia. This…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Researchers, Novices, Higher Education
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Kelsey Dayle John – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to outline the contributions of Smiths legacy in Indigenous methodologies and to show how her interventions encourage and facilitate meaningful research relationships with Indigenous communities. It is also a practical guide for future Indigenous researchers who aim to work with their communities.…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Indigenous Populations, Researchers, Community Involvement
Dipto Das – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Through colonialism, external forces can alter and shift social structures and practices. It causes trans-generational, often normalized, invisible, and profound marginalization of the collective identities of local and indigenous populations. Decolonization is the resisting and undoing of colonial impacts. It's the process of reforming a…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Social Structure, Disadvantaged, Self Concept