Publication | Open Access
Indigenous Storytelling and Participatory Action Research
80
Citations
20
References
2015
Year
EducationIndigenous PeopleIndigenous MovementIndigenous StudySocial SciencesLocal Indigenous KnowledgeIndigenous KnowledgeIndigenous CommunitiesLocal KnowledgeAction ResearchCommunity EngagementIndigenous RightsCultureIndigenous IdentityIndigenous Knowledge SystemsIndigenous StorytellingIndigenous StudiesEthnographyAnthropologyCultural Anthropology
Storytelling, in its various forms, has often been described as a practice with great emancipatory potential. In turn, Indigenous knowledge shows great promise in guiding a participatory action research (PAR) methodology. Yet these two approaches are rarely discussed in relation to one another, nor, has much been written in terms of how these two approaches may work synergistically toward a decolonizing research approach. In this article, I report on a community-driven knowledge translation activity, the Peoples' International Health Tribunal, as an exemplar of how narrative and PAR approaches, guided by local Indigenous knowledge, have great potential to build methodologically and ethically robust research processes. Implications for building globally relevant research alliances and scholarship are further discussed, particularly in relation to working with Indigenous communities.
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