Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts

Ethical publishing practices are vital to tobacco control research practice, particularly research involving Indigenous ( Indigenous peoples : For the purposes of this Special Communication, we use the term Indigenous people(s) to include self-identified individuals and communities who frequently ha...

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Published in:Tobacco Control
Main Authors: Maddox, Raglan, Drummond, Ali, Kennedy, Michelle, Martinez, Sydney A, Waa, Andrew, Nez Henderson, Patricia, Clark, Hershel, Upton, Penney, Lee, Juliet P, Hardy, Billie-Jo, Tautolo, El-Shadan, Bradbrook, Shane, Calma, Tom, Whop, Lisa J
Other Authors: National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship, University of California, National Health and Medical Research Council
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMJ 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/syndication/doi/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
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spelling crjcrbmj:10.1136/tc-2022-057702 2024-10-13T14:07:20+00:00 Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts Maddox, Raglan Drummond, Ali Kennedy, Michelle Martinez, Sydney A Waa, Andrew Nez Henderson, Patricia Clark, Hershel Upton, Penney Lee, Juliet P Hardy, Billie-Jo Tautolo, El-Shadan Bradbrook, Shane Calma, Tom Whop, Lisa J National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship University of California National Health and Medical Research Council National Health and Medical Research Council 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tc-2022-057702 https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/syndication/doi/10.1136/tc-2022-057702 https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/tc-2022-057702 en eng BMJ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Tobacco Control page tc-2022-057702 ISSN 0964-4563 1468-3318 journal-article 2023 crjcrbmj https://doi.org/10.1136/tc-2022-057702 2024-09-19T04:13:20Z Ethical publishing practices are vital to tobacco control research practice, particularly research involving Indigenous ( Indigenous peoples : For the purposes of this Special Communication, we use the term Indigenous people(s) to include self-identified individuals and communities who frequently have historical continuity with precolonial/presettler societies; are strongly linked to the land on which they or their societies reside; and often maintain their own distinct language(s), belief and social-political systems, economies and sciences. The authors humbly acknowledge, respect and value that Indigenous peoples are diverse and constitute many nations, cultures and language groups. Many Indigenous peoples also exist as governments in treaty relations with settler-colonial societies, and all Indigenous peoples have inherent rights under international law. The language and terminology used should reflect the local context(s) and could include, but are not limited to, terms such as Aboriginal, Bagumani, Cherokee, First Peoples, First Nations, Inuit, Iwaidja, Kungarakan, Lakota, Māori, Mѐtis, American Indian, Navajo, Wagadagam, Wiradjuri, Yurok, etc) people. These practices can minimise, correct and address biases that tend to privilege Euro-Western perspectives. Ethical publishing practices can minimise and address harms, such as appropriation and misuse of knowledges; strengthen mechanisms of accountability to Indigenous peoples and communities; ensure that tobacco control research is beneficial and meaningful to Indigenous peoples and communities; and support Indigenous agency, sovereignty and self-determination. To ensure ethical practice in tobacco control, the research methodology and methods must incorporate tangible mechanisms to include and engage those Indigenous peoples that the research concerns, affects and impacts. Tobacco Control is currently missing an ethical research and evaluation publishing protocol to help uphold ethical practice. The supporters of this Special Communication call on Tobacco ... Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations inuit The BMJ Indian Tobacco Control tc-2022-057702
institution Open Polar
collection The BMJ
op_collection_id crjcrbmj
language English
description Ethical publishing practices are vital to tobacco control research practice, particularly research involving Indigenous ( Indigenous peoples : For the purposes of this Special Communication, we use the term Indigenous people(s) to include self-identified individuals and communities who frequently have historical continuity with precolonial/presettler societies; are strongly linked to the land on which they or their societies reside; and often maintain their own distinct language(s), belief and social-political systems, economies and sciences. The authors humbly acknowledge, respect and value that Indigenous peoples are diverse and constitute many nations, cultures and language groups. Many Indigenous peoples also exist as governments in treaty relations with settler-colonial societies, and all Indigenous peoples have inherent rights under international law. The language and terminology used should reflect the local context(s) and could include, but are not limited to, terms such as Aboriginal, Bagumani, Cherokee, First Peoples, First Nations, Inuit, Iwaidja, Kungarakan, Lakota, Māori, Mѐtis, American Indian, Navajo, Wagadagam, Wiradjuri, Yurok, etc) people. These practices can minimise, correct and address biases that tend to privilege Euro-Western perspectives. Ethical publishing practices can minimise and address harms, such as appropriation and misuse of knowledges; strengthen mechanisms of accountability to Indigenous peoples and communities; ensure that tobacco control research is beneficial and meaningful to Indigenous peoples and communities; and support Indigenous agency, sovereignty and self-determination. To ensure ethical practice in tobacco control, the research methodology and methods must incorporate tangible mechanisms to include and engage those Indigenous peoples that the research concerns, affects and impacts. Tobacco Control is currently missing an ethical research and evaluation publishing protocol to help uphold ethical practice. The supporters of this Special Communication call on Tobacco ...
author2 National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship
University of California
National Health and Medical Research Council
National Health and Medical Research Council
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Maddox, Raglan
Drummond, Ali
Kennedy, Michelle
Martinez, Sydney A
Waa, Andrew
Nez Henderson, Patricia
Clark, Hershel
Upton, Penney
Lee, Juliet P
Hardy, Billie-Jo
Tautolo, El-Shadan
Bradbrook, Shane
Calma, Tom
Whop, Lisa J
spellingShingle Maddox, Raglan
Drummond, Ali
Kennedy, Michelle
Martinez, Sydney A
Waa, Andrew
Nez Henderson, Patricia
Clark, Hershel
Upton, Penney
Lee, Juliet P
Hardy, Billie-Jo
Tautolo, El-Shadan
Bradbrook, Shane
Calma, Tom
Whop, Lisa J
Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts
author_facet Maddox, Raglan
Drummond, Ali
Kennedy, Michelle
Martinez, Sydney A
Waa, Andrew
Nez Henderson, Patricia
Clark, Hershel
Upton, Penney
Lee, Juliet P
Hardy, Billie-Jo
Tautolo, El-Shadan
Bradbrook, Shane
Calma, Tom
Whop, Lisa J
author_sort Maddox, Raglan
title Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts
title_short Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts
title_full Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts
title_fullStr Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts
title_full_unstemmed Ethical publishing in ‘Indigenous’ contexts
title_sort ethical publishing in ‘indigenous’ contexts
publisher BMJ
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
https://tobaccocontrol.bmj.com/syndication/doi/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre First Nations
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genre_facet First Nations
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op_source Tobacco Control
page tc-2022-057702
ISSN 0964-4563 1468-3318
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1136/tc-2022-057702
container_title Tobacco Control
container_start_page tc-2022-057702
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