Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.

Much of the social science, humanities, and health research which has been done to date in the North, the subjects of this presentation, may not well serve the needs and interests of the northern peoples, however much the intentions were often good and some benefits were achieved. Much of the southe...

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Main Author: Feit, Harvey A.
Other Authors: Anthropology
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Canadian Polar Commission 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23934
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spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/23934 2024-09-15T18:31:26+00:00 Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research. Partenariats autochtones pour le savoir et la recherche sociale dans le nord. Feit, Harvey A. Anthropology 1994 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23934 en eng Canadian Polar Commission Feit, Harvey A. 1994. “Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.” In Canada and Polar Science. John K. Stager, ed. Ottawa: Canadian Polar Commission. Pp. 47-57. (Also published as “Partenariats autochtones pour le savoir et la recherche sociale dans le nord." Dans Le Canada et la science polaire. John Stager, ed. Ottawa: Commission canadienne des affaires polaires. Pp. 44-56). 0-662-22950-9 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23934 Indigenous Knowledge Knowledge as Power Decentralizing Science Science in Practice Co-research Scientific Epistemologies Images of Science Science in the North Presentation 1994 ftmcmaster 2024-06-26T04:35:26Z Much of the social science, humanities, and health research which has been done to date in the North, the subjects of this presentation, may not well serve the needs and interests of the northern peoples, however much the intentions were often good and some benefits were achieved. Much of the southern-initiated research assumes a superior base of knowledge. Yet, both local knowledge and comparative research from elsewhere in the world are often seen as valuable by local communities. Interestingly, the social sciences, health sciences, and humanities are going through a period of re-orientations and re-evaluations of their own at present. Important discipline-based science is now being developed outside of the urban centres of Western countries, and this process is leading to a diversification of research goals and ways of doing research. These networked global developments complement, and give additional impetus to the kinds of expectations northern peoples have for locally-shaped relations to outside researchers. The epistemological assumptions of social research and analysis are also changing as discipline-based researchers respond to critiques, especially that the way they write and think about science does not correspond to what they as researchers actually do. Social research is more complex than has been pretended, and yet it is much more like ordinary life. There is a growing realization of how decisively human research ties the researchers and others together in social processes linked to everyday life. These developments have profound implications for the way northern research should be conducted, and many of these implications parallel and complement the expectations for research relations which northerners have been expressing. I discuss here how some of these issues became clearer to me as I looked back on my own research experiences. I only slowly came to realize that in a very real and practical sense, I did not have Cree research "assistants," I was part of a joint research team, although I did ... Conference Object Polar Science Polar Science MacSphere (McMaster University)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language English
topic Indigenous Knowledge
Knowledge as Power
Decentralizing Science
Science in Practice
Co-research
Scientific Epistemologies
Images of Science
Science in the North
spellingShingle Indigenous Knowledge
Knowledge as Power
Decentralizing Science
Science in Practice
Co-research
Scientific Epistemologies
Images of Science
Science in the North
Feit, Harvey A.
Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.
topic_facet Indigenous Knowledge
Knowledge as Power
Decentralizing Science
Science in Practice
Co-research
Scientific Epistemologies
Images of Science
Science in the North
description Much of the social science, humanities, and health research which has been done to date in the North, the subjects of this presentation, may not well serve the needs and interests of the northern peoples, however much the intentions were often good and some benefits were achieved. Much of the southern-initiated research assumes a superior base of knowledge. Yet, both local knowledge and comparative research from elsewhere in the world are often seen as valuable by local communities. Interestingly, the social sciences, health sciences, and humanities are going through a period of re-orientations and re-evaluations of their own at present. Important discipline-based science is now being developed outside of the urban centres of Western countries, and this process is leading to a diversification of research goals and ways of doing research. These networked global developments complement, and give additional impetus to the kinds of expectations northern peoples have for locally-shaped relations to outside researchers. The epistemological assumptions of social research and analysis are also changing as discipline-based researchers respond to critiques, especially that the way they write and think about science does not correspond to what they as researchers actually do. Social research is more complex than has been pretended, and yet it is much more like ordinary life. There is a growing realization of how decisively human research ties the researchers and others together in social processes linked to everyday life. These developments have profound implications for the way northern research should be conducted, and many of these implications parallel and complement the expectations for research relations which northerners have been expressing. I discuss here how some of these issues became clearer to me as I looked back on my own research experiences. I only slowly came to realize that in a very real and practical sense, I did not have Cree research "assistants," I was part of a joint research team, although I did ...
author2 Anthropology
format Conference Object
author Feit, Harvey A.
author_facet Feit, Harvey A.
author_sort Feit, Harvey A.
title Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.
title_short Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.
title_full Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.
title_fullStr Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.
title_full_unstemmed Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.
title_sort indigenous partnerships in knowledge and northern social research.
publisher Canadian Polar Commission
publishDate 1994
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23934
genre Polar Science
Polar Science
genre_facet Polar Science
Polar Science
op_relation Feit, Harvey A. 1994. “Indigenous Partnerships in Knowledge and Northern Social Research.” In Canada and Polar Science. John K. Stager, ed. Ottawa: Canadian Polar Commission. Pp. 47-57. (Also published as “Partenariats autochtones pour le savoir et la recherche sociale dans le nord." Dans Le Canada et la science polaire. John Stager, ed. Ottawa: Commission canadienne des affaires polaires. Pp. 44-56).
0-662-22950-9
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/23934
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