Collaborative untangling of positionality, ownership, and answerability as white researchers in indigenous spaces

Author:

Bennett Catherine1ORCID,Fitzpatrick-Harnish Kate2,Talbot Brent3

Affiliation:

1. Oakland University, USA

2. University of Michigan, USA

3. Gettysburg College, USA

Abstract

Decentering whiteness and decolonizing educational research is not a simple matter for researchers who may (initially) be unaware of their social locations. This paper begins by describing the three authors’ individual work within indigenous populations and subsequently explores the impact of their critical journey together as a community of scholars working to decolonize their research practice. Following an overview of their individual stories, the authors share principles of ethical scholarly engagement within indigenous communities, particularly positionality, ownership, and answerability, that they hope will be valuable to others who may embark upon similar critically reflective journeys. Alongside each of these principles, they pose “unanswered questions” so as not to uphold their journey as a model, but rather to illuminate how this work is messy, challenging, eye-opening, unsettling, and ongoing. The authors conclude that it is the “methodological responsibility” of white scholars to do the ethical work to understand, untangle, and dismantle potentially harmful dispositions, orientations, and practices before engaging with indigenous communities, and suggest that such transformation may be most powerfully pursued in a purposeful and collaborative space.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Music,Education

Reference31 articles.

1. Ahmed S. (2004). Declarations of whiteness: The non-performativity of anti-racism. Borderlands, 3(2).

2. Racializing research: Managing power and politics?

3. Allison M. (2020, October 14). How white people can talk to each other about disrupting racism. DoSomething. https://www.dosomething.org/us/articles/how-white-people-can-talk-to-each-other-about-disrupting-racism

4. Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. (2012). Guidelines for ethical research in Australian indigenous studies. Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.

5. Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies. (2020). A guide to applying the AIATSIS Code of Ethics for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander research. Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies.

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