Publication | Closed Access
Being, Knowing, and Doing
85
Citations
47
References
2012
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationHuman ConditionCognitionIndigenous PeopleSocial SciencesPsychologyIndigenous StudyAboriginal Empowerment ProcessesRespectful FrameworkGender StudiesIndigenous HistoryQualitative SociologyCognitive ScienceSelf-awarenessMotivationFeminist TheoryIndigenous Knowledge SystemsIndigenous StudiesAboriginal Australian PartnersEthnographyAnthropologyQualitative MethodSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
Researchers working with Aboriginal Australian partners are confronted with an array of historical, social, and political complexities which make it difficult to come to theoretical and methodological decisions. In this article, we describe a culturally safe and respectful framework that maintains the intellectual and theoretical rigor expected of academic research. As an Aboriginal woman and two non-Aboriginal women, we discuss the arguments and some of the challenges of using grounded theory methods in Aboriginal Australian contexts, giving examples from our studies of Aboriginal empowerment processes. We argue that the ethics of care and responsibility embedded in Aboriginal research methodologies fit well with grounded theory studies of Aboriginal social processes. We maintain that theory development grounded in data provides useful insights into the processes for raising the health, well-being, and prosperity of Aboriginal Australians.
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