Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals

'It is vital that Indigenous researchers are recognised and duly acknowledged, and that the research being published is culturally appropriate' (Professor Donald Warne, Oglala Lakota, International Adviser, Australian Journal of Rural Health, 2021). Background: In health research publicati...

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Published in:Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine
Main Authors: Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J., McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye, Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald, Bennett, Bindi, Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie, Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi, Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea, Worley, Paul, Hutten-Czapski, Peter, Saurman, Emily, Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica, Walke Bundjalung, Emma, Edwards Worimi, Dave, Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie, Browne, Jennifer, Roberts, Russell
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Wolters Kluwer - Medknow Publications and Media Pvt. Ltd. 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/30bb6ed539f3cff998dd3a67a4ebf0817977b8c594b2bba145bc95d0cd6ce611/655939/OA_Bennett_2022_Indigenous_cultural_identity_of_research_authors.pdf
https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22
id ftaustraliancuni:oai:acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au:9091x
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Australian Catholic University: ACU Research Bank
op_collection_id ftaustraliancuni
language unknown
topic rural health
rural medicine
Indigenous peoples
spellingShingle rural health
rural medicine
Indigenous peoples
Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J.
McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye
Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald
Bennett, Bindi
Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie
Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi
Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea
Worley, Paul
Hutten-Czapski, Peter
Saurman, Emily
Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica
Walke Bundjalung, Emma
Edwards Worimi, Dave
Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie
Browne, Jennifer
Roberts, Russell
Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals
topic_facet rural health
rural medicine
Indigenous peoples
description 'It is vital that Indigenous researchers are recognised and duly acknowledged, and that the research being published is culturally appropriate' (Professor Donald Warne, Oglala Lakota, International Adviser, Australian Journal of Rural Health, 2021). Background: In health research publication, it is difficult to distinguish authors who self-identify as Indigenous peoples, for example, as First Nations, Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Māori, Pacifica, American Indian, Alaskan Native, Métis, Inuit or as any of the 370 million Indigenous peoples worldwide.[1] Their invisibility is partly due to the lack of attribution in the publications; for instance, the author list - with first and last names only - restricts the conveyance of identity. Our goal as an academic community should be to expand the inclusiveness of research governance to include publication governance. Editorial rules stipulate the publication of ethics approvals, statements of interest, organisational affiliations, declaration of funding sources and author contributions to the articles, but what about Indigenous cultural identity? The issue of author identity is especially relevant for rural and remote health journals because Indigenous peoples living in rural and remote health locations experience health inequities linked to racism and cultural suppression. We, the editorial teams of the Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine (CJRM), Australian Journal of Rural Health (AJRH) and the Rural and Remote Health (RRH), are changing our editorial rules so that research published about Indigenous peoples includes Indigenous peoples as authors, or evidence is provided of Indigenous peoples' genuine engagement in all the stages of the research process, including crafting the manuscript.[2,3,4] Our next step is to propose the development of an Indigenous Cultural Identity of Research Authors Standard (ICIRAS, pronounced 'I-keye-ras', short 'I' sound in Indigenous, hard 'k' sound for Culture and long 'eye' sound in Identity)
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J.
McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye
Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald
Bennett, Bindi
Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie
Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi
Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea
Worley, Paul
Hutten-Czapski, Peter
Saurman, Emily
Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica
Walke Bundjalung, Emma
Edwards Worimi, Dave
Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie
Browne, Jennifer
Roberts, Russell
author_facet Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J.
McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye
Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald
Bennett, Bindi
Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie
Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi
Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea
Worley, Paul
Hutten-Czapski, Peter
Saurman, Emily
Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica
Walke Bundjalung, Emma
Edwards Worimi, Dave
Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie
Browne, Jennifer
Roberts, Russell
author_sort Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J.
title Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals
title_short Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals
title_full Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals
title_fullStr Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals
title_sort indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : research and reconciliation with indigenous peoples in rural health journals
publisher Wolters Kluwer - Medknow Publications and Media Pvt. Ltd.
publishDate 2022
url https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/30bb6ed539f3cff998dd3a67a4ebf0817977b8c594b2bba145bc95d0cd6ce611/655939/OA_Bennett_2022_Indigenous_cultural_identity_of_research_authors.pdf
https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre First Nations
inuit
genre_facet First Nations
inuit
op_relation https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/9091x/indigenous-cultural-identity-of-research-authors-standard-research-and-reconciliation-with-indigenous-peoples-in-rural-health-journals
ISSN:1488-237X
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/30bb6ed539f3cff998dd3a67a4ebf0817977b8c594b2bba145bc95d0cd6ce611/655939/OA_Bennett_2022_Indigenous_cultural_identity_of_research_authors.pdf
https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22
Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J., McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye, Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald, Bennett, Bindi, Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie, Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi, Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea, Worley, Paul, Hutten-Czapski, Peter, Saurman, Emily, Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica, Walke Bundjalung, Emma, Edwards Worimi, Dave, Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie, Browne, Jennifer and Roberts, Russell. (2022). Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals. Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine. 27(3), pp. 104-110. https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22
op_rights CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22
container_title Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine
container_volume 27
container_issue 3
container_start_page 104
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spelling ftaustraliancuni:oai:acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au:9091x 2024-06-23T07:52:52+00:00 Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J. McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald Bennett, Bindi Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea Worley, Paul Hutten-Czapski, Peter Saurman, Emily Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica Walke Bundjalung, Emma Edwards Worimi, Dave Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie Browne, Jennifer Roberts, Russell 01 Jan 2022 application/pdf https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/30bb6ed539f3cff998dd3a67a4ebf0817977b8c594b2bba145bc95d0cd6ce611/655939/OA_Bennett_2022_Indigenous_cultural_identity_of_research_authors.pdf https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22 unknown Wolters Kluwer - Medknow Publications and Media Pvt. Ltd. https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/9091x/indigenous-cultural-identity-of-research-authors-standard-research-and-reconciliation-with-indigenous-peoples-in-rural-health-journals ISSN:1488-237X https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/download/30bb6ed539f3cff998dd3a67a4ebf0817977b8c594b2bba145bc95d0cd6ce611/655939/OA_Bennett_2022_Indigenous_cultural_identity_of_research_authors.pdf https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22 Lock Ngiyampaa, Mark J., McMillan Wiradjuri, Faye, Warne Oglala Lakota, Donald, Bennett, Bindi, Kidd Ngāpuhi, Jacquie, Williams Bkejwanong, Naomi, Martire Australian Settler, Jodie Lea, Worley, Paul, Hutten-Czapski, Peter, Saurman, Emily, Matthews Quandamooka, Veronica, Walke Bundjalung, Emma, Edwards Worimi, Dave, Owen Nurrunga And Ngarrendjeri, Julie, Browne, Jennifer and Roberts, Russell. (2022). Indigenous cultural identity of research authors standard : Research and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples in rural health journals. Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine. 27(3), pp. 104-110. https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22 CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 rural health rural medicine Indigenous peoples journal-article PeerReviewed 2022 ftaustraliancuni https://doi.org/10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_25_22 2024-06-03T23:47:25Z 'It is vital that Indigenous researchers are recognised and duly acknowledged, and that the research being published is culturally appropriate' (Professor Donald Warne, Oglala Lakota, International Adviser, Australian Journal of Rural Health, 2021). Background: In health research publication, it is difficult to distinguish authors who self-identify as Indigenous peoples, for example, as First Nations, Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, Māori, Pacifica, American Indian, Alaskan Native, Métis, Inuit or as any of the 370 million Indigenous peoples worldwide.[1] Their invisibility is partly due to the lack of attribution in the publications; for instance, the author list - with first and last names only - restricts the conveyance of identity. Our goal as an academic community should be to expand the inclusiveness of research governance to include publication governance. Editorial rules stipulate the publication of ethics approvals, statements of interest, organisational affiliations, declaration of funding sources and author contributions to the articles, but what about Indigenous cultural identity? The issue of author identity is especially relevant for rural and remote health journals because Indigenous peoples living in rural and remote health locations experience health inequities linked to racism and cultural suppression. We, the editorial teams of the Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine (CJRM), Australian Journal of Rural Health (AJRH) and the Rural and Remote Health (RRH), are changing our editorial rules so that research published about Indigenous peoples includes Indigenous peoples as authors, or evidence is provided of Indigenous peoples' genuine engagement in all the stages of the research process, including crafting the manuscript.[2,3,4] Our next step is to propose the development of an Indigenous Cultural Identity of Research Authors Standard (ICIRAS, pronounced 'I-keye-ras', short 'I' sound in Indigenous, hard 'k' sound for Culture and long 'eye' sound in Identity) Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations inuit Australian Catholic University: ACU Research Bank Indian Canadian Journal of Rural Medicine 27 3 104