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Getting to the heart of the matter: a research partnership with Aboriginal women in South and Central Australia.

Authors :
McBride, Katharine
Franks, Christine
Wade, Vicki
King, Veronica
Rigney, Janice
Burton, Nyunmiti
Dowling, Anna
Mitchell, Julie Anne
Van Kessel, Gisela
Howard, Natasha
Paquet, Catherine
Hillier, Susan
Nicholls, Stephen J.
Brown, Alex
Source :
Critical Public Health; Jun2023, Vol. 33 Issue 3, p363-374, 12p, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Within the vast majority of qualitative health research involving Indigenous populations, Indigenous people have been marginalised from research conceptualisation and conduct. This reflects a lack of regard for Indigenous ways of knowing, being, and doing, has served to perpetuate deficit narratives of Indigenous peoples' health and wellbeing, and contributes to failure in addressing inequities as a result of ongoing colonisation and institutionalised oppression and racism. There is a need to place Indigenous voices and ways of doing at the centre of research by working in intercultural partnership, bringing together Indigenous and Western knowledges. This paper explores how such an approach can be applied, demonstrating a reflective process of conceptualisation and conduct that brings together Indigenous ways of working with grounded theory with Aboriginal communities in Australia. Furthermore, it supported a non-Indigenous researcher to learn ways of working respectfully, guided by community protocols. A six-stage research process was developed, overseen by an Aboriginal Women's Advisory Group. Research conceptualisation and conduct centred on three principles: bringing together Aboriginal ways of working with Western research methodology; using women's own voices to develop a narrative of cardiovascular health and wellbeing; and ensuring that tangible outcomes were delivered to women and communities in the spirit of partnership and reciprocity. This approach, guided at all steps by Indigenous women, demonstrates a way of adapting qualitative Western methodology to ensure values and principles of ethical guidelines of conduct are upheld to unravel constructs of colonisation, redress past wrongdoing, and reverse deficit narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09581596
Volume :
33
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Critical Public Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163695330
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09581596.2022.2147417