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Skip to Search Results- 43Campbell, Sandy
- 28Parlee, Brenda
- 27GAPSSHRC
- 22Dorgan, Marlene
- 21Tjosvold, Lisa
- 16Karsgaard, Carrie; Mackay, Mackenzie; Catholique, Alexandria
- 364Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 364Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 83Toolkit for Grant Success
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Results for "Indigenous"
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Spring 2023
Allyship is loosely defined as the actions of an individual who works to advance the interests of marginalized groups in which they are not a member. Allyship in the healthcare field is under-studied yet is increasingly an area of interest, given Indigenous health outcomes throughout the world, and
especially in countries with colonial histories, are generally poorer than the mainstream population. This qualitative research study took place with healthcare providers in and around the Edmonton area that are community-identified allies providing care for Indigenous patients. Due to the impacts of the
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Clinical Management of H. pylori Infection for Indigenous and Northern Communities in Canada: Guidelines Developed from CANHelp Research
Download2019-08-01
Karen J Goodman, Sander Veldhuyzen van Zanten, Amy Colquhoun, Andre Corriveau, Brendan Hanley, Rachel Munday, Janis Geary, CANHelp Working Group
Community H. pylori (Hp) projects conducted by the CANHelp Working Group during 2007- 2018 generated local evidence of relevance to clinical decision-making about Hp infection in Arctic Indigenous communities. We used this information to adapt current Canadian guidelines for northern and Indigenous
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Victim of Deceit and Self-Deceit: The Role of the State in Undermining Jim Brady’s Radical Métis Socialist Politics
DownloadFall 2018
cooperatives in predominantly Indigenous communities in the northern prairies. Using the James Brady fonds, housed at the Glenbow Museum, archival materials from the Gabriel Dumont Institute, and the small body of secondary literature pertaining to Brady, I conduct a discourse analysis informed by Mary Jane
McCallum’s Indigenous right of reply, Chris Andersen’s concept of density, and Kim TallBear’s “standing with” methodology to approach Brady’s life and work. My research outlines Brady’s political vision: Métis socialist liberation in solidarity with the broader working class, and how his struggle to realize
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Experiential Science 30 Sustainability and Freshwater Resources (Indigenous Knowledge Lesson Plan)
Download2020-06-01
Karsgaard, Carrie; Mackay, Mackenzie; Catholique, Alexandria
order to determine whether (and how) ecotourism would fit within their local community. This lesson will introduce students to the concept of sustainability from Indigenous perspectives, as well as how the principle can be applied to ecotourism in northern communities. Students will learn to listen to
Elders and/or local fish harvesters define sustainability and apply local and Indigenous knowledge to decision-making around ecotourism.
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Towards a Pedagogy of Intercultural Understanding: Participatory Design Research with Urban Indigenous and Newcomer Immigrant Youth
DownloadFall 2019
youth from culturally diverse and ethnoculturally marginalized communities. This study seeks to learn how participatory design-based research methods can contribute to understanding issues of intercultural communication among the youth from urban Indigenous and newcomer immigrant communities. The
following research questions guided this study: How can engagement with a participatory design research process for youth from urban Indigenous and newcomer immigrant communities foster intercultural understanding? In what ways may findings from this study influence transformative pedagogical practices? The
growing participation in the design thinking circles (d.circles) from the population of newcomer Muslim immigrant and urban Indigenous communities, which represented two of the predominantly racialized and hence marginalized communities. The project involved youth-engaged d. circles in the local community
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Spring 2021
Digital libraries are online environments for organizing, sharing, and providing access to resources in digital form. Ideally, their content, functionality, organization, and metadata should reflect the needs, interests, and contexts of the communities they are meant to serve. Indigenous
frameworks for digital libraries, and how those frameworks can be surfaced. Through a participatory case study of the Inuvialuit Digital Library (https://inuvialuitdigitallibrary.ca), a community driven research partnership, I sought to address two guiding research questions: a) how do Indigenous communities
of the community, and a framework that can be the basis of its continued growth and development. In striving to be a good relation and approach this work with respect and in the spirit of reciprocity, in this research I have demonstrated how Indigenous and non-Indigenous individuals can work together
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2019-07-31
SSHRC CG awarded 2019: Tuberculosis (TB) is an endemic disease within many Indigenous communities in the Treaty 8 territory. It has roots both within the historical contexts of the affected communities, and the historic failure of clinical medicine to achieve culturally relevant health outcomes. In
event willfocus on the knowledge held by community members, and the historical record including the rights of Indigenous peoples as they relate to the interface between government/western medicine/universities, and communities living with persistently high rates of TB. It will be an opportunity to learn