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172 pages, Hardcover
Published February 7, 2022
“Decolonization is a bridge between two worlds”
[...] While it has been touted that Canada is in a era of reconciliation, the truth of the matter is that many Indigenous peoples continue to experience ongoing colonial oppression that contributes to severe health inequalities.
Daschuk's work clearly shows that over the past century public health researchers have been aware that reserves exist in harsh environments and unsafe conditions, all of which continue to contribute to high rates of disease, starvation, suicide, alcoholism, and other forms of trauma but this awareness was dismissed as “officials began to interpret the chronic bad health of the Indigenous population as a condition of their race”.
This book is not about Indigenous methodologies; […] this book offers a conversation about how ongoing structures of colonization negatively impact the well-being of Indigenous peoples and communities across Canada that has resulted in persistent health inequalities. This book is an unique scholarly contribution that yields valuable insights into addressing health inequalities and intends to bring the concept of decolonizing research methods and Indigenous people into mainstream sociology in a way that has until now been neglected. For me, the decolonization of research within social sciences is about rational allyship, partnership, honouring Indigenous ethical protocols, holding space for resurgence, and challenging power structures. In decolonizing my own research praxis, I have reflected about the power structures that define and uphold my thoughts and practices. I explain how research design practices need to be culturally responsive, which means that researchers need to work in partnership with Indigenous peoples, communities, and / or organizations in such a way as to avoid misinterpretations and misrepresentations in the knowledge inquiry process. These are partnerships that will facilitate meaningful dialogue because Indigenous peoples, communities, and organizations can re-story the historical trauma on a number of levels to recreate new ways of understanding and contesting the deeply ingrained structures of inequality.
What does it mean to decolonize? Decolonization offers different pathways for reconnecting Indigenous peoples with their traditional territories and land / water-based cultural practices. The decolonization process operates at multiple levels and necessitates moving from an awareness of being in struggle to actively engaging in daily practices of resurgence. More specifically, it is in those everyday acts of resurgence that the scope of the struggle for decolonization is reclaimed by Indigenous peoples. If colonization dispossessed Indigenous Peoples from land and culture, “the resurgence is about reconnecting with traditional land-based and water-based cultural practices”. While decolonization and resurgence can be described separately, they are viewed in this book as interrelated actions and strategies that inform pathways to resistance and freedom – everyday decolonization and resurgence practices from the basis of Indigenous health and well-being and applying decolonized research methodologies produces knowledge that supports self-determination.