The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada

Indigenous women experience higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV), when compared with non-Indigenous women. Little research has focused on Indigenous women's perspectives of IPV. Three Northern Ontario First Nations communities wished to collaborate with researchers on IPV research. T...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alexander Bennett, Beaudin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Laurentian University of Sudbury 2017
Subjects:
TRC
Online Access:https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/2945
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spelling ftlaurentian:oai:zone.biblio.laurentian.ca:10219/2945 2023-08-20T04:06:32+02:00 The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada Alexander Bennett, Beaudin 2017-11-27 application/pdf video/mp4 https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/2945 en eng Laurentian University of Sudbury https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/2945 Canada Indigenous peoples First Nations photovoice intimate partner violence qualitative methods visual research methods cultural safety TRC visual thinking strategies Thesis 2017 ftlaurentian 2023-07-31T10:21:52Z Indigenous women experience higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV), when compared with non-Indigenous women. Little research has focused on Indigenous women's perspectives of IPV. Three Northern Ontario First Nations communities wished to collaborate with researchers on IPV research. To provide women’s perspectives on IPV, groups of participants were established in each community (n=3). Participants (n=23) chose to approach research on IPV from a strengths-based approach and, together with researchers, transformed the photovoice method to research according to Indigenous worldviews. Gaataa’aabing is a new visual research method which adapts to the cultural values of participants and emphasizes participant-desired outcomes as a required result of research. Video footage and images from group sessions on IPV were used to create an educational video that promotes cultural safety for service providers who work with Indigenous women, shares Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships, highlights strengths which might help address IPV, and works toward reconciliation. Master of Indigenous Relations (MIR) Thesis First Nations LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University Canada
institution Open Polar
collection LU|ZONE|UL @ Laurentian University
op_collection_id ftlaurentian
language English
topic Canada
Indigenous peoples
First Nations
photovoice
intimate partner violence
qualitative methods
visual research methods
cultural safety
TRC
visual thinking strategies
spellingShingle Canada
Indigenous peoples
First Nations
photovoice
intimate partner violence
qualitative methods
visual research methods
cultural safety
TRC
visual thinking strategies
Alexander Bennett, Beaudin
The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada
topic_facet Canada
Indigenous peoples
First Nations
photovoice
intimate partner violence
qualitative methods
visual research methods
cultural safety
TRC
visual thinking strategies
description Indigenous women experience higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV), when compared with non-Indigenous women. Little research has focused on Indigenous women's perspectives of IPV. Three Northern Ontario First Nations communities wished to collaborate with researchers on IPV research. To provide women’s perspectives on IPV, groups of participants were established in each community (n=3). Participants (n=23) chose to approach research on IPV from a strengths-based approach and, together with researchers, transformed the photovoice method to research according to Indigenous worldviews. Gaataa’aabing is a new visual research method which adapts to the cultural values of participants and emphasizes participant-desired outcomes as a required result of research. Video footage and images from group sessions on IPV were used to create an educational video that promotes cultural safety for service providers who work with Indigenous women, shares Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships, highlights strengths which might help address IPV, and works toward reconciliation. Master of Indigenous Relations (MIR)
format Thesis
author Alexander Bennett, Beaudin
author_facet Alexander Bennett, Beaudin
author_sort Alexander Bennett, Beaudin
title The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada
title_short The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada
title_full The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada
title_fullStr The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada
title_full_unstemmed The Noojamadaa Project: using visual research methods to elicit Indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in Canada
title_sort noojamadaa project: using visual research methods to elicit indigenous women’s perspectives on healthy relationships and support reconciliation in canada
publisher Laurentian University of Sudbury
publishDate 2017
url https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/2945
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://zone.biblio.laurentian.ca/handle/10219/2945
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