Academic Allyship in Nursing: Deconstructing a successful community-academic collaboration

Public health and social care systems in Canada are frequently racist and discriminatory towards Indigenous people and exacerbates health inequities that Indigenous people experience. In New Brunswick, there are a range of culturally informed health and social services being offered within First Nat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quality Advancement in Nursing Education - Avancées en formation infirmière
Main Authors: Hickey, Jason, Crawford, Mike, McKinney, Patsy
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Quality Advancement in Nursing Education - Avancées en formation infirmière 2022
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Online Access:https://qane-afi.casn.ca/journal/vol8/iss3/9
https://doi.org/10.17483/2368-6669.1361
https://qane-afi.casn.ca/context/journal/article/1361/viewcontent/auto_convert.pdf
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Summary:Public health and social care systems in Canada are frequently racist and discriminatory towards Indigenous people and exacerbates health inequities that Indigenous people experience. In New Brunswick, there are a range of culturally informed health and social services being offered within First Nations communities and by Indigenous organization that operate outside of reserves. Some of these services and organizations rely on support from non-Indigenous allies to meet the needs of their community members. However, it can be challenging for non-Indigenous people to engage in allyship due to unconscious bias, false assumptions, and lack of cross-cultural understanding. Effective allyship can also be challenging due a lack of understanding of the time, resources, and commitments that are required. Academic allyship from within post-secondary institutions can be particularly challenging because of a history of past harm done to Indigenous communities and entrenched colonial structures and policies. The purpose of this article is to provide an example of academic allyship with an urban Indigenous organization and consider some of the success factors that have supported this ongoing collaboration. The authors reflect on more than four years of successful collaboration and use a recent project to illustrate what worked and why. The success factors were, building a relationship and trust; becoming better informed; offering support freely; stepping off the beaten path (to tenure); staying critically self-aware; and enjoying the work (immensely). The success factors are not intended as a roadmap because every collaboration is unique. However, they may help potential allies enter potential collaboration being better informed. Academic allyship can be highly impactful and highly rewarding, but it also should not be undertaken without reflection on one’s reasons for doing so and capacity to commit. Résumé Les systèmes de santé et de services sociaux publics au Canada font souvent preuve de racisme et de discrimination ...