Indigenous knowledge mobilization: reflection on context, content, and relationship

Author:

Hutchinson Peter James1ORCID,McIlduff Cari Dawn2,Legare Marlin3ORCID,Keewatin Miranda4,Hagel Mikayla2,Chapados Meghan5,Acharibasam John Bosco2

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, School of Public and Population Health, The University of British Columbia Okanagan, Canada

2. College of Medicine, Indigenous Community Based Health Research Lab, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

3. College of Medicine—College of Pharmacy and Nutrition, University of Saskatchewan, Canada

4. All Nations Hope Network, Canada

5. College of Medicine, University of Toronto, Canada

Abstract

First Nations, Inuit, and Métis, Indigenous peoples in Canada, have long experienced racism within health services resulting in a health service system that many Indigenous people in Canada do not want to access. Research informing Indigenous health services must consider how findings and analysis happen within the community, what information is shared, and how it improves access to health services. Information shared in Indigenous research methods was communicated at the end and throughout the project. Indigenous knowledge mobilization in Indigenous research methods requires researchers to receive knowledge from the community and research participants. Also, knowledge sharing and moving into practice happen continuously throughout the research process. These qualities of Indigenous knowledge mobilization facilitate increasing accessibility to health services through Indigenous knowledge identified in research. This article describes an Indigenous knowledge mobilization framework that may be adapted within Indigenous communities looking to make transparent how Indigenous knowledge is incorporated within health services.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History,Anthropology,Cultural Studies

Reference47 articles.

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5. Knowledge translation in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research contexts in Australia: scoping review protocol

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