"Thank you very much... You can leave our community now.”: Geographies of responsibility, relational ethics, acts of refusal, and the conflicting requirements of academic localities in Indigenous research

dc.contributor.authorSylvestre, Paul
dc.contributor.authorCastleden, Heather
dc.contributor.authorMartin, Debbie
dc.contributor.authorMcNally, Mary
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-20T19:40:15Z
dc.date.available2025-02-20T19:40:15Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractThis paper reports on the findings from a series of twenty in-depth, semi-structured interviews that explored how a group of leading Canadian health researchers who are recognized for their excellence in community-engaged Indigenous health research envision enacting an anti-colonial research agenda and the inherent tensions of doing so in institutional settings. Interview transcripts were thematically analyzed in order to explore how the different places that shape community-engaged scholarship (Community spaces, Offices of Research Ethics, and Office of Finance and Administration) 1) produce different, often conflicting understandings of responsibility; 2) how different spaces constrain and shape agency in terms of enacting forms of responsibility in research, and; 3) the role that settler subjectivities have in shaping acts of interpretation that are productive of institutionally mediated forms of responsibility. We organize themes of responsibility, relational ethics, and acts of refusal around the locales through which they are produced and mediated in order to display narratives relating to each site. Specifically, we highlight how relationally negotiated formulations of ethical responsibility, which occur between Indigenous community partners and researchers, can be circumscribed or marginalized by existing institutional structures. By making visible the ways in which conflicting responsibilities emerge and must be negotiated in working toward anti-colonial research relationships, our findings contribute to ongoing conversations regarding Indigenous-settler alliances in health research.
dc.description.reviewstatusReviewed
dc.description.scholarlevelFaculty
dc.description.sponsorshipWe would like to thank the Canadian Institutes of Health Research for funding this study through a Catalyst Grant.
dc.identifier.citationSylvestre, P., Castleden, H., Martin, D., & McNally, M. (2018). "Thank you very much... You can leave our community now.”: Geographies of responsibility, relational ethics, acts of refusal, and the conflicting requirements of academic localities in Indigenous research. ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 17(3). 10.14288/acme.v17i3.1327
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.14288/acme.v17i3.1327
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1828/21238
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies
dc.rightsCC BY-NC-ND 4.0
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.subject.departmentSchool of Public Administration
dc.title"Thank you very much... You can leave our community now.”: Geographies of responsibility, relational ethics, acts of refusal, and the conflicting requirements of academic localities in Indigenous research
dc.typeArticle

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