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Indigenizing research methods: making research outcomes better for all

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-21, 02:03 authored by Spencer LilleySpencer Lilley
In the context of Indigenizing academic practices and promoting cultural inclusivity within library and information institutions, this paper explores the significance of incorporating Indigenous approaches to research within LIS research methods courses. It argues that Indigenous research methods can be adapted and applied to other contexts, especially where research isbeing done in Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) communities, who also have a history of being marginalized in research. This paper advocates for research methods to be transformed by incorporating Indigenous approaches into research methods education and empowering students to become culturally competent researchers. The paper will demonstrate how the use of Indigenous methodologies provides students with an understanding of alternative paradigms informed by indigenous ways of knowing

Funding

Empowering Indigenous Knowledge: Decolonisation and Indigenisation Of Gallery, Library, Archival, Museum And Records (GLAMR) Institutions. | Funder: Royal Society of New Zealand

History

Preferred citation

Lilley, S. (2024, October). Indigenizing research methods: making research outcomes better for all. In Proceedings of the Association for Library and Information Science Education Annual Conference: ALISE 2024The Ethics and Evolution of Truth and Information ALISE 2024, Portland, Oregon (pp. 1-7).

Conference name

ALISE 2024

Conference start date

2024-10-14

Conference finish date

2024-10-17

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the Association for Library and Information Science Education Annual Conference: ALISE 2024The Ethics and Evolution of Truth and Information

Contribution type

Published Paper

Publication or Presentation Year

2024-10-14

Pagination

1-7

Publication status

Published

Place of publication

Portland, Oregon

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